Carney, Trump Heard Talking Chinese EVs on Hot Mic at the G7 Summit
Carney said the cap would limit Chinese EV imports to 49,000 a year at a 6.1% tariff, a deal Trump said he could understand.
- On Tuesday, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney pitched President Donald Trump on Canada's plan to import Chinese electric vehicles during a G7 summit working lunch in Evian-les-Bains, France.
- Canada and China struck a deal in January allowing 49,000 Chinese-made EVs annually at a 6.1% tariff, though President Trump previously warned Canada against becoming a "drop off port" for Chinese vehicles.
- In a hot-microphone moment, Carney told President Trump the imports represent "less than three per cent of our market," and Trump responded, "That's good, I like it."
- Canada-US Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc later noted the EV discussion was "one of a number of issues" raised, emphasizing there is "nothing new" in the Prime Minister's position regarding the arrangement's time-limited nature.
- Negotiations regarding the Canada-US-Mexico Agreement remain tense as the July 1 renewal deadline approaches, while G7 leaders discuss global security challenges in Ukraine and the Middle East.
22 Articles
22 Articles
Carney Defends China EV Deal With Trump, Outlines Conditions for Chinese Auto Investments in Canada
Prime Minister Mark Carney says he discussed his Chinese electric vehicle deal with U.S. President Donald Trump at the G7 summit in France. The discussion took place as Chinese electric vehicles are entering the Canadian market and as Ottawa is courting China to establish production lines in Canada. Trump and his officials had sharply criticized Canada’s deal with China, while Carney told reporters on June 17 that the president “likes the struct…

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