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Canada Is LOSING to Mexico in U.S. Trade Talks… And LeBlanc Just Proved It

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0:00

We saw President Trump's directive to

0:02

the American negotiators last fall uh to

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suspend negotiations with Canada. We

0:09

were in the process of advancing uh we

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thought in a positive way on the

0:14

sectoral tariffs. Um that is the

0:17

discussion that Mr. Trump suspended. um

0:21

the first formal meeting, face-to-face

0:25

meeting where I introduced our new

0:27

ambassador to trade representative

0:29

Greer. Uh our chief negotiator was

0:32

appointed. Uh she met the deputy USR who

0:35

would be her counterpart in the

0:37

technical details. That meeting happened

0:39

a month a month ago. So in a sense uh

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that would have been the the resumption

0:45

of those uh conversations. There have

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been a number uh of conversations at the

0:52

level of Ambassador Weisman, at the

0:54

level of Madame Shahet, with their

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counterparts. Um I've exchanged messages

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with my counterparts in the US cabinet.

1:03

Um and we remain seized both of the uh

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challenge that the sectoral tariffs

1:10

represent but also uh the the the review

1:15

of the KOSMA agreement. You said Tonda

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renegotiation. We're not looking to

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renegotiate at all. Um and our and our

1:23

>> the question was also

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>> we don't need to renew if the agreement

1:26

is is in place for a defined period of

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time. What it says is that in 2026 there

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shall be a review. Um that's the work

1:35

that we're doing now with the Americans.

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Um we remain optimistic that that review

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will conclude positively, but that's the

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work that we're doing with them now. and

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the Mexicans are doing it with the

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Americans as well. At one point, my

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conversations with the Mexicans and the

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Americans would lead us to think that

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there will be uh at some point uh

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trilateral meetings as well as part of

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that review process.

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>> Dominic LeBlanc, you saucy brat. Welcome

2:02

back to Tap the Maple here on Bakes on

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Things for your afternoon edition. You

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know, Dominic Leblanc wants Canadians to

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believe the trade file is moving right

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along. Just moving, moving, moving. and

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we are going to eventually get a deal

2:16

with the US. We promise. But it's not

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moving well. It's certainly not moving

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fast. And it's not moving with any

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urgency. Just moving in a sense, as

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Dominic so eloquently put it. And that

2:29

right there tells you probably

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everything you need to know about the

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actual negotiations. Because when a

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country is getting hammered with

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tariffs, when our steel sector is

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exposed, when our auto sector is

2:39

exposed, when businesses are desperate

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for certainty ahead of a major kusma

2:44

review, the last thing any serious

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minister should be saying is that talks

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have resumed

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in a sense. What does that even mean?

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That doesn't that doesn't make What do

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you mean in a sense? Either talks are

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back on or they are not back on. Those

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are the two options. Either Canada is at

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the table in a meaningful way or it

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simply is not at the table in a

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meaningful way. Either way, we are

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leading this file in a wrong direction.

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We are looking at humiliation on the

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brink. And the real issue, while Dominic

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Leblanc is feeding Canadians vague,

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mushy bureaucratic nonsense, well,

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Mexico, south of the US, is already way

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further down the road. The United States

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and Mexico formally launched the review

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process weeks ago. They are already

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announcing next steps. They have already

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moved into technical discussions on

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supply chains, rules of origin, and

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manufacturing. Meanwhile, Canada is

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still standing outside saying, "Don't

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worry everybody, we remain engaged

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in a sense." Engaged in what, Dominic?

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Like, what are we doing here finally?

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Because from where Canadians are

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sitting, it looks like Mexico brought a

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briefcase, a plan, and a calendar, while

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Canada brought Dominic Leblanc, a press

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scum, and a thesaurus full of delay

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words. Let's tap into the truth.

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>> Welcome to Bakes on Things.

4:17

Welcome back to Tap to Maple here on

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Bakes on Things. You know, this is the

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story of this government, isn't it? in

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one sentence, always talking, always

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spinning, always insisting progress is

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being made somewhere behind the curtain.

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But when you actually check the facts,

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somebody else is already halfway down

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the field, and it's not even your own

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country. Tonight, we are going to rip

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apart the latest update from Leblanc. We

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are going to expose just how badly

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Canada is mishandling tariff

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negotiations yet again and ask the

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question nobody in the media seems

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willing to ask honestly. Why does Mexico

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look more prepared, more focused, and

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more urgent than Canada does on a file

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that should be an economic emergency for

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this country. Dominic Leblanc's latest

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update on Canada US tariff negotiations

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was supposed to, I think, reassure us

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Canadians. Instead, I don't know about

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you, but for me, it did the exact

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opposite of that because the more he

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talked, the clearer it became that

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either he does not fully control this

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file or he does not want Canadians to

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understand how little progress has

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actually been made with the United

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States. He said that talks have resumed

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but then added in a sense and I think

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that's the part we need to pay attention

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to. He said Canada remains engaged. He

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said negotiations will begin in due

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course. Those are not the words of a

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government racing to protect jobs,

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investment, and market access. Those are

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the words of a government trying to blur

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the line between activity and actual

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achievement. And Canadians need to stop

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letting them get away with this trick

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because this trick is the worst

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trick-or- treat trick I have ever seen

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in my entire life. And it's not

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Halloween anyway. This government has

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turned language itself into a hiding

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place. They never fix a problem. They

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remain seized with the challenge. They

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never fall behind. They are simply

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engaged in productive discussions. They

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never admit weakness. They simply

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announce that more conversations will

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happen later sometime somewhere down the

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road with someone at some point at some

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defined time in some defined location.

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But this is trade. This is not a therapy

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session, Dominic. This is not a graduate

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seminar on diplomatic wording. This is

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the economic future of an entire country

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whose prosperity still depends

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enormously on access to that American

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market you are trading with. in a sense.

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So, let's cut through your Dominic

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LeBlanc fog, shall we? The United States

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and Mexico formally launched the USMCA

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review process on March 5th. Not in a

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sense, formally, publicly on the record.

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Then on March 18th, the two countries

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announced next steps and directed

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technical teams to work through specific

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options tied to North American

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production, supply chains, and rules of

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origin. This is what urgency looks like.

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Dominic, tell your boss. This is what

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preparation looks like. That is what a

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government does when it understands the

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clock is ticking and anou won't simply

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do the job. Now, compare that with, of

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course, us. On March 6, Leblanc met with

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US trade representative Jameson Greer

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and introduced Canada's new chief

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negotiator Janice Sheret, who looks like

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a bull in a china shop. I'm sorry, but

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she does. I'm not sure how easy it's

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going to be to deal with her. Then weeks

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later, he tells Canadians that this

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meeting was quote, "In a sense, the

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resumption of talks." That is an

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astonishing admission because it means

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Ottawa is trying to sell a first

8:01

introduction and some follow-up

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conversations as though that amounts to

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momentum. It most certainly, my friends,

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does not. It amounts to Canada still

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trying to get organized while others

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already are negotiating substance in

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other countries. And Greer himself did

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not leave much room for liberal spin. He

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said Canada is behind Mexico

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dramatically on the bilateral talks

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