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Canada removing retaliatory tariffs on CUSMA-compliant U.S. goods

Canada will remove all tariffs on goods from the United States that are covered by the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) by Sept. 1, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Friday. 

The prime minister said Canada will maintain its tariffs on steel, aluminum and autos as the Liberal government works with the U.S. to craft a new trading relationship between the two countries.

Carney said that despite the ongoing trade war, and U.S. tariffs on steel, aluminum, autos, copper and energy, 85 per cent of trade with the U.S. is still tariff free, which is a better deal than other countries have. 

"As we work to address outstanding trade issues with the U.S., it is important we do everything can to preserve this unique advantage for Canadian workers and their families," Carney said.

A White House official said they welcome the move, calling it "long overdue."

The official added that they "look forward to continuing discussions with Canada on trade and national security concerns."...

This was excerpted from the 22 August 2025 edition of CBC News.

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U.S. Tariffs and Canadian Retaliatory Surtax

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