Canada Welcomes Supreme Court Ruling Against Trump Tariffs
Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc was among the first to respond, posting on X that the ruling "reinforces Canada's position that the IEEPA tariffs imposed by the United States are unjustified."
While noting the strength of the bilateral trade relationship, LeBlanc acknowledged that "critical work lies ahead" to support Canadian businesses and workers still exposed to Section 232 tariffs targeting steel, aluminum, and the automotive sector.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford struck a similarly cautious tone, framing the decision as a win — but an incomplete one.
"Today's U.S. Supreme Court decision is another important victory in the fight against President Trump's tariffs but the battle isn't over yet. We need to watch how the White House reacts," Ford said.
The premier made clear he intends to keep up pressure on remaining trade barriers.
"We need to keep up the fight against tariffs on auto, steel, aluminum and forestry, which remain in place and continue to hurt our workers. I won't stop fighting until every last tariff against Canada is dropped so we can grow our economies and create jobs on both sides of the border," said the premier.
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