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Mark Carney Hit With Final Warning – “Get A Deal Or It’s Over” | MP Chris Lewis

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What is the worst case scenario if there

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is no deal that comes for these business

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owners? What happens to those 58,000

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jobs?

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>> They're gone forever. So, the jobs are

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lost, the business is lost, the tax base

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is gone. Um, this is this is imminent.

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Like, absolutely imminent.

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>> That industry also feeds the 2.1 million

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manufacturing jobs that are in Canada.

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What happens then?

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There's a number I want you to think

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about. 2.1 million.

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That's the amount of jobs that are in

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the Canadian economy that have to do

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with manufacturing.

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Now, think about another number, 58,000.

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That's the amount of jobs that comprise

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the mold, tool, and dye industries in

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Canada.

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And that number is especially important

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because that industry is under threat

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right now.

1:00

Not one year from now, not five years

1:02

from now, between three and six months

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from now because of the latest 232

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tariffs that have come down from

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President President Donald Trump. We

1:11

covered this in committee the other day

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and there was powerful testimony that

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was delivered by many of the business

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owners that chose to come to Ottawa to

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fight for their business and their

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employees because Ottawa has not been

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listening. And Mark Carney has not been

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working.

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He needs to be doing his job and going

1:32

down to Washington until he gets a deal

1:34

with Donald Trump. Because if he

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doesn't,

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the mole, tool, and die industry could

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end up vanishing from the Canadian

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economy forever and having a

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catastrophic impact on the 2.1 million

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jobs in manufacturing across the

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country.

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Joining us to talk about this today is

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Member of Parliament Chris Lewis from

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Essex. and he is literally at ground

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zero of where the mold tool and die

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industry is in Canada. So Chris, thanks

2:04

for joining us on Northern Perspective

2:06

today.

2:06

>> Well, thank you so very much, Ry. It's

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such an important topic. Um there's just

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so many jobs at risk, so many businesses

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that are literally hemorrhaging and have

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no clarity, no clarity, and it's all

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about the uncertainty and how do you run

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a business in uncertain times. So it

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it's an honor to be here. I thank you so

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much for educating uh Canadians from

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coast to coast to coast quite frankly.

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Of course uh the the Essex Windsor

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region um is probably the most

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influential uh when it comes to mold and

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tool and diet, but Quebec equally uh has

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a lot of tool and dye and mold there as

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well. So um it's but again it's across

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the country. So it's a wildly important

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topic. So before we get started, Chris,

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there's a special special message that

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you have for a special someone today,

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isn't there?

2:54

>> Yeah, there is. And unfortunately, I'm

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not with that special someone right now,

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but hopefully maybe even this afternoon

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I will be. Um my wife my wife Allison's

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50th birthday today. So um I love you

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lots. I love you dearly. Um thanks for

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allowing me to do what I do. Thanks for

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giving me the freedom to do what I do.

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um she knows it's a passion of mine, but

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but the sacrifice that she makes for

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myself and for our family is enormous

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and I couldn't do this without her. So,

3:21

happy birthday, sweetie.

3:23

>> Now, were these tariffs that came down

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from President Trump on April 6th, were

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they a surprise to the industry? They

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they must have been.

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>> If I had shipped the part on Holy

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Thursday or Good Friday, it would have

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cost me $1,500 in tariffs. But because

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we delayed till the following week after

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Easter Monday, uh it's now $36,000.

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So not $1,500. And it's hard to wrap

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your have to wrap the brain around.

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These numbers are real. And this is on a

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$244,000

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tool.

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>> That's that's an insane number. That

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that means his tariff cost on that one

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part went up by over 1,000%.

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>> Yes.

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>> Which is insanity. And for those that

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don't know, um, so the the way this

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happened is before April 6th, and you

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can correct me if I'm wrong, but my

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understanding is that for every tool

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they shipped, they would have to pay a

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tariff that uh that was on the 232

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tariffs based on the value of the steel

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that was in that product or whatever,

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correct?

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>> Uh, whatever metal that was in there.

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and they would have to pay, you know, 10

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to 15% on that. So if the steel was

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valued at $100, they would pay between

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10 and $15. But now, now

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what has happened? So you're you're

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absolutely correct. That's what it was

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previously. So there's a there was a

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tariff for the the um US steel, there

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was a tariff on Canadian steel, and a

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tariff on Chinese steel. So instead now

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of saying there's going to be various

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tariffs that will all go into the just

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the tool itself, what the new 232 tariff

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now says is it's on the complete price

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of the tool. So it's on the purchase

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order price, which also would include

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all of your labor, right? All of your

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overhead, all of those things is what

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they're paying a tariff on now. And

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that's why we're seeing the wild tariffs

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going up. And that's why I think even a

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more important point to this whole

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thing, Ryan, is um this very tool, they

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got the PO last year, last May.

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So a year ago, this was this was what

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they've been working on. All those 1,500

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labor hours into one tool. You think

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about how many jobs that is. But they

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started it last year and now with the

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flick of a switch, it goes from 1,500 to

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36,000. And I guess the big question is

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so why is Prime Minister Carney not in

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the United States screaming about this?

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And why does he think it's okay to just

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to to punt the to punt the ball down the

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road? Uh it's not okay. It's wrong and

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people are going to be losing their jobs

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quickly.

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>> So ladies and gentlemen, this is a

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example of some of the numbers from one

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of the companies that was actually in

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committee yesterday and this is what

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Chris is talking about right now. So

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some proprietary information has been

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removed. So it keeps the confidentiality

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of the client and the actual tool

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itself. But you can see the purchase

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order date was from May 19th of 2025.

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And there's four purchase orders here.

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And you can see the price. This is the

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price to the customer. So this is

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supposed to include any margin that the

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the company would actually earn. So they

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sold it for $359,000

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on the first one, 173 second, 205 on the

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third, and 129 in the fourth. So here's

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where it gets complicated. The steel

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tariffs came in on August 18th of 2025.

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So that price already went up 13,871

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or around 4,000 or 3,600 on the other

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products. So the company said, "Okay,

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we'll just absorb that. Not a problem."

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Well, now

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now the tariff on that has gone up to

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53,000, 26,000, 30,000, and 19,000. So

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when when they were expecting to pay

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around $25,000 to absorb the tariffs

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that were implemented in August, now

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those tariffs are looking at $130,000

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for all of them for an extra $14,000

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that they did not expect to actually

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pay. And this drives up that total tool

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price to $1 million

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on all of those orders.

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So I guess the I guess the first

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question that that should be asked is so

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when these tariffs came down, did the

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business owners try reaching out to the

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government? Did they try reaching out to

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the minister and and cabinet? And did

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they get any response?

7:58

>> Yeah, I don't I don't know any specifics

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on that. um they're very very wise

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people with a whole bunch of

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