1 MIN AGO: CARNEY REJECTS TRUMP’S ULTIMATUM — $865B U.S.–CANADA TRADE TIES HIT A BREAKING POINT

Donald Trump has issued his clearest threat yet to Canada, demanding compliance rather than negotiation. The ultimatum is blunt: accept American dominance over Canadian resources and trade decisions or face 100% tariffs on everything crossing the border. That threat puts roughly $865 billion in annual U.S.–Canada trade at risk, from automobiles and oil to steel and critical minerals. But instead of panic, Ottawa delivered a flat refusal—one that signals this relationship is entering a new phase.

At the center of that refusal is Mark Carney, who has drawn a public red line on sovereignty. Canada, he made clear, will not accept ultimatums on trade, energy, or foreign policy. Speaking on the global stage at World Economic Forum, Carney warned that major powers are increasingly weaponizing economic integration, and that middle powers must coordinate or risk being coerced. His message was unmistakable: Canadian decisions are made in Ottawa, not Washington.

Trump’s response followed a familiar pattern. He mocked Canada’s leadership, floated the idea of economic blockade, and framed dependence on U.S. markets as permanent leverage. But that assumption is already cracking. The U.S. House of Representatives voted 219–211 to terminate Trump’s existing Canada tariffs, with six Republicans joining Democrats. Lawmakers from industrial states understand the reality Trump ignores: American supply chains are deeply entangled with Canada, often crossing the border multiple times during production.

Roughly 60% of U.S. oil imports come from Canada, along with the majority of electricity imports and key inputs for defense, construction, and manufacturing. Automotive, energy, and defense industries have quietly lobbied against the tariffs, warning they would damage American businesses faster than Canadian ones. That pressure explains the House revolt and exposes a core weakness in Trump’s strategy—he lacks the domestic political support to sustain the economic pain his threats would cause.

While Trump escalates rhetorically, Carney is accelerating diversification. Canada has expanded targeted trade arrangements with China, opening billions in new agricultural export markets. It is integrating into European defense procurement programs, reducing reliance on American contractors, and strengthening Arctic security partnerships with Denmark that operate independently of Washington. Each new partnership reduces U.S. leverage and makes future threats less effective.

The result is a quiet but historic shift. This is no longer about a single trade dispute or a tariff cycle; it is about autonomy. Trump wants submission. Canada is building options. As infrastructure, markets, and alliances diversify, the assumption that Canada has “no choice” is collapsing in real time. The $865 billion trade relationship is not disappearing overnight, but its balance of power is changing—and Trump’s ultimatums are accelerating that change rather than stopping it.

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