
25 January 2026
Trump Threatens Canada with 100 Percent Tariffs Over China Trade Ties Amid Escalating Global Economic Tensions
China Tariff News and Tracker
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Welcome to China Tariff News and Tracker, your essential update on the escalating trade battles shaping global markets. President Donald Trump has fired a fresh salvo in his tariff war, this time targeting Canada over its budding trade ties with China. According to Fox News, Trump posted on Truth Social that if Canada becomes a drop-off port for Chinese goods entering the US, it will face immediate 100 percent tariffs on all Canadian products. He warned Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, whom he called governor, that China would devour Canada's businesses and way of life.
This threat follows Carney's recent Beijing visit, where Canada agreed to slash its tariffs on up to 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles from 100 percent to just 6.1 percent, per Carney's office. In return, China will lower duties on Canadian canola seed to 15 percent by March 1 and exempt items like lobsters, crabs, and peas from anti-discrimination tariffs through year's end, as reported by ABC News and Global News. Canadian officials insist no free trade deal with China is in play, with Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc emphasizing the US partnership remains paramount.
Tensions boiled over at Davos, where Carney declared the rules-based order is fading in an era of great-power rivalry—a jab Trump interpreted personally. Trump retorted that Canada should be grateful for US freebies. ABC News notes this echoes Trump's earlier nonchalant stance on Carney's China trip, but Saturday's post marks a sharp pivot.
On the broader US-China front, Wikipedia's tariff tracker shows US duties on Chinese goods at a baseline 10 percent as of August 2025, down from peaks of 145 percent after market turmoil, with a 10 percent fentanyl add-on recently halved post-Xi meeting. De minimis exemptions for low-value Chinese packages ended in 2025, hiking effective rates further. Politico estimates average US tariffs now at 27 percent, the highest in a century.
Trump's Canada warning underscores his strategy to isolate China, but experts via Town and Country Today warn such moves could boomerang, hurting US consumers and exporters alike. As reciprocal tariffs reshape trade, watch for retaliatory ripples.
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This threat follows Carney's recent Beijing visit, where Canada agreed to slash its tariffs on up to 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles from 100 percent to just 6.1 percent, per Carney's office. In return, China will lower duties on Canadian canola seed to 15 percent by March 1 and exempt items like lobsters, crabs, and peas from anti-discrimination tariffs through year's end, as reported by ABC News and Global News. Canadian officials insist no free trade deal with China is in play, with Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc emphasizing the US partnership remains paramount.
Tensions boiled over at Davos, where Carney declared the rules-based order is fading in an era of great-power rivalry—a jab Trump interpreted personally. Trump retorted that Canada should be grateful for US freebies. ABC News notes this echoes Trump's earlier nonchalant stance on Carney's China trip, but Saturday's post marks a sharp pivot.
On the broader US-China front, Wikipedia's tariff tracker shows US duties on Chinese goods at a baseline 10 percent as of August 2025, down from peaks of 145 percent after market turmoil, with a 10 percent fentanyl add-on recently halved post-Xi meeting. De minimis exemptions for low-value Chinese packages ended in 2025, hiking effective rates further. Politico estimates average US tariffs now at 27 percent, the highest in a century.
Trump's Canada warning underscores his strategy to isolate China, but experts via Town and Country Today warn such moves could boomerang, hurting US consumers and exporters alike. As reciprocal tariffs reshape trade, watch for retaliatory ripples.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe now for weekly deep dives. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI