The Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeaumet this Friday in Florida with the president-elect of the United States, Donald Trump, a few days after the Republican threatened to impose a 25% surcharge on all imported goods on his North American partners.
Although the visit was not on the prime minister’s official agenda nor had the president-elect confirmed the meeting, press reports have confirmed the arrival of Trudeau to the Palm Beach International Airport (Florida), near Trump’s residence in Mar-a-Lago.
Trudeau had dinner with Trump at Mar-a-Lago on friday night. Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc accompanied the prime minister, according to sources cited by the newspaper. New York Times.
The meeting takes place after the president-elect of the United States has put the governments of Mexico and Canada on alert after announcing that he will apply a 25% tariff to all goods imported from those two countries, as well as a 10% additional surcharge to Chinese products, until both – which are their main trading partners – stop the arrival of illegal immigration and drugs.
The visit to Mar-a-Lago on Friday, reported by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), is intended to be a direct effort by Trudeau to show that he has a plan to address Trump’s border concerns and prevent the tariff from being applied.
In the morning, the prime minister told the Canadian press that he and Trump “will work together to address some of the concerns” of the Republican and reply to those problems.
The prime minister has also warned that what is really “important to understand” is that when Trump makes statements like these “he plans to carry them out. There is no doubt about it.”
Both Trudeau and the president of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum, reacted to the announcement by warning Trump that these tariffs would cause enormous damage to the economy of the entire region.
The Canadian prime minister met on Wednesday night with the heads of government of the 11 provinces of that country to outline a common strategy in the face of the threat from the elected president of the United States.
Trudeau stressed in that meeting that “the number of migrants trying to travel from Canada to the United States is a fraction of those trying to travel from Mexico to the United States,” according to his office in a statement.
Canada’s strategy so far is disassociate as much as possible from Mexico and emphasize that the northern border of the United States is secure to prevent Trump from making his threat a reality and imposing tariffs that economists warn will plunge the country into a recession.
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