Canada Is LOSING to Mexico in U.S. Trade Talks… And LeBlanc Just Proved It
VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT
We saw President Trump's directive to
the American negotiators last fall uh to
suspend negotiations with Canada. We
were in the process of advancing uh we
thought in a positive way on the
sectoral tariffs. Um that is the
discussion that Mr. Trump suspended. um
the first formal meeting, face-to-face
meeting where I introduced our new
ambassador to trade representative
Greer. Uh our chief negotiator was
appointed. Uh she met the deputy USR who
would be her counterpart in the
technical details. That meeting happened
a month a month ago. So in a sense uh
that would have been the the resumption
of those uh conversations. There have
been a number uh of conversations at the
level of Ambassador Weisman, at the
level of Madame Shahet, with their
counterparts. Um I've exchanged messages
with my counterparts in the US cabinet.
Um and we remain seized both of the uh
challenge that the sectoral tariffs
represent but also uh the the the review
of the KOSMA agreement. You said Tonda
renegotiation. We're not looking to
renegotiate at all. Um and our and our
>> the question was also
>> we don't need to renew if the agreement
is is in place for a defined period of
time. What it says is that in 2026 there
shall be a review. Um that's the work
that we're doing now with the Americans.
Um we remain optimistic that that review
will conclude positively, but that's the
work that we're doing with them now. and
the Mexicans are doing it with the
Americans as well. At one point, my
conversations with the Mexicans and the
Americans would lead us to think that
there will be uh at some point uh
trilateral meetings as well as part of
that review process.
>> Dominic LeBlanc, you saucy brat. Welcome
back to Tap the Maple here on Bakes on
Things for your afternoon edition. You
know, Dominic Leblanc wants Canadians to
believe the trade file is moving right
along. Just moving, moving, moving. and
we are going to eventually get a deal
with the US. We promise. But it's not
moving well. It's certainly not moving
fast. And it's not moving with any
urgency. Just moving in a sense, as
Dominic so eloquently put it. And that
right there tells you probably
everything you need to know about the
actual negotiations. Because when a
country is getting hammered with
tariffs, when our steel sector is
exposed, when our auto sector is
exposed, when businesses are desperate
for certainty ahead of a major kusma
review, the last thing any serious
minister should be saying is that talks
have resumed
in a sense. What does that even mean?
That doesn't that doesn't make What do
you mean in a sense? Either talks are
back on or they are not back on. Those
are the two options. Either Canada is at
the table in a meaningful way or it
simply is not at the table in a
meaningful way. Either way, we are
leading this file in a wrong direction.
We are looking at humiliation on the
brink. And the real issue, while Dominic
Leblanc is feeding Canadians vague,
mushy bureaucratic nonsense, well,
Mexico, south of the US, is already way
further down the road. The United States
and Mexico formally launched the review
process weeks ago. They are already
announcing next steps. They have already
moved into technical discussions on
supply chains, rules of origin, and
manufacturing. Meanwhile, Canada is
still standing outside saying, "Don't
worry everybody, we remain engaged
in a sense." Engaged in what, Dominic?
Like, what are we doing here finally?
Because from where Canadians are
sitting, it looks like Mexico brought a
briefcase, a plan, and a calendar, while
Canada brought Dominic Leblanc, a press
scum, and a thesaurus full of delay
words. Let's tap into the truth.
>> Welcome to Bakes on Things.
Welcome back to Tap to Maple here on
Bakes on Things. You know, this is the
story of this government, isn't it? in
one sentence, always talking, always
spinning, always insisting progress is
being made somewhere behind the curtain.
But when you actually check the facts,
somebody else is already halfway down
the field, and it's not even your own
country. Tonight, we are going to rip
apart the latest update from Leblanc. We
are going to expose just how badly
Canada is mishandling tariff
negotiations yet again and ask the
question nobody in the media seems
willing to ask honestly. Why does Mexico
look more prepared, more focused, and
more urgent than Canada does on a file
that should be an economic emergency for
this country. Dominic Leblanc's latest
update on Canada US tariff negotiations
was supposed to, I think, reassure us
Canadians. Instead, I don't know about
you, but for me, it did the exact
opposite of that because the more he
talked, the clearer it became that
either he does not fully control this
file or he does not want Canadians to
understand how little progress has
actually been made with the United
States. He said that talks have resumed
but then added in a sense and I think
that's the part we need to pay attention
to. He said Canada remains engaged. He
said negotiations will begin in due
course. Those are not the words of a
government racing to protect jobs,
investment, and market access. Those are
the words of a government trying to blur
the line between activity and actual
achievement. And Canadians need to stop
letting them get away with this trick
because this trick is the worst
trick-or- treat trick I have ever seen
in my entire life. And it's not
Halloween anyway. This government has
turned language itself into a hiding
place. They never fix a problem. They
remain seized with the challenge. They
never fall behind. They are simply
engaged in productive discussions. They
never admit weakness. They simply
announce that more conversations will
happen later sometime somewhere down the
road with someone at some point at some
defined time in some defined location.
But this is trade. This is not a therapy
session, Dominic. This is not a graduate
seminar on diplomatic wording. This is
the economic future of an entire country
whose prosperity still depends
enormously on access to that American
market you are trading with. in a sense.
So, let's cut through your Dominic
LeBlanc fog, shall we? The United States
and Mexico formally launched the USMCA
review process on March 5th. Not in a
sense, formally, publicly on the record.
Then on March 18th, the two countries
announced next steps and directed
technical teams to work through specific
options tied to North American
production, supply chains, and rules of
origin. This is what urgency looks like.
Dominic, tell your boss. This is what
preparation looks like. That is what a
government does when it understands the
clock is ticking and anou won't simply
do the job. Now, compare that with, of
course, us. On March 6, Leblanc met with
US trade representative Jameson Greer
and introduced Canada's new chief
negotiator Janice Sheret, who looks like
a bull in a china shop. I'm sorry, but
she does. I'm not sure how easy it's
going to be to deal with her. Then weeks
later, he tells Canadians that this
meeting was quote, "In a sense, the
resumption of talks." That is an
astonishing admission because it means
Ottawa is trying to sell a first
introduction and some follow-up
conversations as though that amounts to
momentum. It most certainly, my friends,
does not. It amounts to Canada still
trying to get organized while others
already are negotiating substance in
other countries. And Greer himself did
not leave much room for liberal spin. He
said Canada is behind Mexico
dramatically on the bilateral talks
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