
Trump's 51st state comments can be taken as 'term of endearment': U.S. ambassador
In an interview with CBC's Power & Politics, Hoekstra suggested Carney saw the comments as a "term of endearment," while clarifying Canada's leader "didn't exactly use this word."
When asked whether Canadians should also see the 51st state talk as a term of endearment, Hoekstra said "they can see it however they want."
In an interview with Fox News over the weekend, Trump repeated his belief that Canada should be a U.S. state.
"Canada relies entirely on the United States, we don't rely on Canada," he said.
Trump's ambassador in Ottawa says those comments should be taken with consideration to how the two leaders have been getting along since Carney became prime minister.
"President Trump doesn't invite people onto his team who he doesn't like, who he doesn't trust, who he doesn't respect. You know he wants a strong team," said Hoesktra in an interview with guest host Catherine Cullen a day before Canada Day.
The rhetoric resurfaced this weekend as the U.S. briefly ended all trade discussions with Canada over the digital services tax (DST), which would have seen U.S. companies like Amazon, Google, Meta, Uber and Airbnb pay three per cent on revenues from Canadian users.
The policy, with tax collection set to begin Monday, would have applied retroactively, leaving U.S. companies with a $2-billion US bill.
Canada promptly rescinded the DST on Sunday evening, which paved the way for Canada and the U.S. to resume trade negotiations Monday morning. Carney told reporters that the two countries are keeping the previously agreed-upon July 21 deadline in mind during the trade talks.
U.S. press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters that Canada had "caved" to Trump in rescinding the tax.
WATCH | White House press secretary says Canada 'caved':
'Canada caved' on digital services tax, says White House spokesperson
3 hours ago
Duration 0:42
In response to a reporter's question about trade talks with Canada, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Prime Minister Mark Carney 'caved' to U.S. President Donald Trump after the latter said on Friday he was ending discussions because of the digital services tax. The Canadian government announced late Sunday evening it would rescind the tax.
Hoekstra told Power & Politics that "caving" isn't how he'd describe it, but that Canada knew the DST was a "red line" for the U.S.
The tax caused Canada to "move from the front of the line to the back of the line" in Trump's negotiations with countries. Canada is now "back at the front of the line," he said.
The path forward
With the DST eliminated, Trump has other longstanding objections that could become barriers to progress.
Trump repeated his complaints about Canada's steep tariffs on egg, dairy and poultry imports over the weekend, which he says disadvantages American farmers. Many of the tariff rates he often quotes are rarely, if ever, applied.
Right before breaking for the summer, Parliament passed Bill C-202, which will hamstring the government from making concessions that affect agricultural supply management during trade negotiations.
Hoekstra said he doesn't see C-202 as a roadblock to a deal.
He said he has a "strong belief" that "the prime minister probably could find a way to get Parliament to do [his] will, just like the president today" to get a deal made.
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Winnipeg Free Press
29 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Limited options for Democrats to retaliate if Texas Republicans redraw congressional map
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In other states where Democrats control the governor's office and legislature, including Colorado and Washington, the party has backed independent commissions that cannot redraw, let alone rig, maps in the middle of the decade. Democrats say 'foundations of our democracy' at stake When the redistricting cycle kicked off in 2021, after the last census, independent commissions were in charge of drawing 95 House seats that otherwise would have been drawn by Democrats, but only 13 that would have been created by Republicans. In a marker of the shift among Democrats, former Attorney General Eric Holder, who heads the party's redistricting effort and has called repeatedly for a more nonpartisan approach, seemed to bless his party's long shot efforts to overrule their commissions. 'We do not oppose – on a temporary basis – responsible, responsive actions to ensure that the foundations of our democracy are not permanently eroded,' Holder said in a statement last week. 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Trump earlier this month told reporters about his hopes of netting five additional GOP seats in Texas and more out of other Republican-controlled states. He has urged new maps in GOP-controlled states such as Indiana and Missouri, while Ohio Republicans are poised to reshape political lines after neutralizing a push to create an independent redistricting commission. Democrats are divided over how to respond to Texas In a sign of the party's divide, Democrats have continued to push for a national redistricting panel that would remove partisanship from the process, even as some call for retaliation against Republicans in defiance of state limitations. 'No unilateral disarmament till both sides are following the law,' said Arizona Sen. Ruben Gallego, like Newsom a possible 2028 presidential contender, wrote on X. Gallego's post came a day before his Democratic colleagues gathered to announce they were reintroducing a bill to create the national commission. An identical bill died in 2022 when it couldn't overcome Republican objections despite Democrats controlling Congress and the presidency. It has no chance now that the GOP is in charge of both branches. Sen. Chris Murphy, another potential 2028 contender, didn't express regret over past reforms that have implemented independent redistricting boards in Democratic states, saying the party 'should never apologize for being for the right thing.' But he added that Republicans 'are operating outside of the box right now and we can't stay inside the box.' 'If they're changing districts in the middle of the 10-year cycle, we have to do the same thing,' he said. That approach, however, hasn't caught on across the party. 'We shouldn't stoop to their tactics,' Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut said. 'It's an ideal that we have accurate and fair representation. We can't abandon it just because Republicans try to manipulate and distort it.' ___ Riccardi reported from Denver. Associated Press writers Scott Bauer in Madison, Wisconsin, Jaimie Ding in Los Angeles, Anthony Izaguirre in Albany, New York, and Brian Witte in Annapolis, Maryland, contributed to this report.


National Post
29 minutes ago
- National Post
From Alberta to Stephen Colbert: An imagined look at who Mark Carney will offer statehood to next
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CBC
29 minutes ago
- CBC
Piece by piece, cranes lift 84 prefabricated rentals into place in downtown Calgary
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