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Trump is bending over backwards to protect American steel — and Canada is paying the price

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Update time : 2025-09-03 13:56:02

WASHINGTON, D.C. — At a steel plant in Pennsylvania in May, U.S. President Donald Trump promised workers a new era of domestic steel production.

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“We are once again going to put Pennsylvania steel into the backbone of America like never before,” Trump said, reflecting how he sees steel as the centrepiece of a revitalized American industrial capacity.
How would he do it? With a tariff workaround that means Canada is paying the price for Trump’s promises in America’s steel-heavy swing states.
The U.S. president has used the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose broad, reciprocal tariffs against countries around the world — for Canada, that’s set at 35 per cent for goods not covered by the Canada-US-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA). Some countries, such as Brazil and India, are facing much higher IEEPA tariffs of 50 per cent.

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