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Canada seeks tariff exemptions as Donald Trump demands ‘completely open markets’

It remains unclear whether Canada and other countries can reach trade deals with the U.S. before Trump’s threatened tariffs are supposed to kick in Friday.

Updated
3 min read
Donald Trump Ballingall.JPG

U.S. President Donald Trump points as he boards Air Force One at RAF Lossiemouth in northeast Scotland on July 29, 2025.


OTTAWA — U.S. President Donald Trump will accept nothing short of “completely open markets” to American goods in other countries, his commerce secretary said Tuesday, as uncertainty continues over whether Canada and a host of nations can reach agreements with the United States before Trump’s latest threatened tariffs are supposed to kick in Friday.

The statement comes as Canada’s cabinet point-person on U.S. trade talks, Dominic LeBlanc, travels to Washington for the second time in recent days for what Prime Minister Mark Carney described Monday as an “intense” phase of negotiations before this week’s deadline. 

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Alex Ballingall

Alex Ballingall is the Deputy Ottawa Bureau Chief for the Star. Email him at aballingall@thestar.ca

Robert Benzie

Robert Benzie is the Star’s Queen’s Park bureau chief and a reporter covering Ontario politics. Follow him on social media: @robertbenzie.

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