Sorry Mexico, step aside China; it’s Canada’s turn to get blasted by Trump
WASHINGTON — Step aside, China and Mexico: Canada is now U.S. President Donald Trump’s whipping-boy-du-jour on trade, something he made abundantly clear Tuesday with a tweet, a tax, a threat, a scolding and a familiar faux-compliment he used to lavish on others.
A preferred Trump tactic is to compliment sly foreigners for outfoxing his supposedly dim-witted presidential predecessors in trade deals. In the 1990s, he said it about Japan. More recently, it was China and Mexico.
Now, as NAFTA negotiations approach, it’s the hockey-happy moose haven to the north that’s pulled a fast one, he suggested Tuesday, one day after he announced a 20 per cent duty on softwood lumber.
“People don’t realize Canada’s been very rough on the United States. Everyone thinks of Canada as being wonderful, and so do I. I love Canada,” Trump said during one of his now-familiar photo ops.


