In the wake of the weekend of anger and betrayal, one of Trump’s economic advisors went on television to insist that we mistakenly believed this to be a trade war when it’s a drug war. You know, except for all of the talk from Trump about trade deficits, and using economic warfare to force annexation, and the fact that he pardoned the guy who founded a big drug trafficking site on the dark web. Trump himself was talking about “51st state” as this very line was being delivered, along with the new whinge that American banks can’t operate in Canada (which they can in various capacities and some of them already are, but they need to adhere to Canadian banking regulations). Yeah, totally about the drug war. And yes, a number of Vichy Canadians also swallowed this bullshit line of reasoning.
While Scott Moe called for de-escalation, we got word that Mexico had reached a reprieve in exchange for ten thousand troops along their border (when they already have fifteen thousand), so while we waited for Trump to have his call with Justin Trudeau, what did Pierre Poilievre demand, as he stated that while the tariffs were unjustified, that Trump was nevertheless right about the border? Troops along our border, along with adoption of his handwavey slogan-plan (of which I will have more in a full column later). Because militarizing our border for the first time since before Confederation is really the solution here. (Scott Moe also suggested putting CBSA under the military, because the man is a gods damned idiot). Never mind that Poilievre has consistently lied about the border, claiming that Trudeau “weakened” it, and that it took Trump to get us to take it seriously, all of which is false. He nevertheless is giving Trump all the more ammunition he needs, and giving succour to the Vichy Canadians who desperately want to believe Trump.
https://bsky.app/profile/emmettmacfarlane.com/post/3lhccxlwz3c2j
https://bsky.app/profile/plagasse.bsky.social/post/3lhc5z2pvlk27
Finally, Trudeau had his call with Trump, and we also got our thirty-day reprieve on the promise of what we were already doing, plus another couple hundred thousand dollars for dealing with organised crime (which yes, is needed), and appointing a “fentanyl czar,” which can get into the sea. We don’t have “czars” in our system of government. Yes, this is empty theatre, and whatever minister or deputy minister is given this title won’t make that much difference, but nevertheless, the precedent becomes set, and future governments are going to start appointing more “czars” to ape Americanisms, which is the very last thing we need.
I just had a good call with President Trump. Canada is implementing our $1.3 billion border plan — reinforcing the border with new choppers, technology and personnel, enhanced coordination with our American partners, and increased resources to stop the flow of fentanyl. Nearly…
— Justin Trudeau (@JustinTrudeau) February 3, 2025
While plenty of Americans mocked that Trump just got played by Canada and Mexico, I’m not really convinced. None of this was done in good faith, and Trump has given so many different reasons for why we deserved to be punished that no one reason can ever be sufficient. The tariff threat hasn’t gone away, and the “reprieve” will be threatened continually every time he thinks of some new shakedown, and it won’t stop. This was only the opening salvo, and while it exposed the positions of some of the players, we’re a long way even seeing the finish line. Buckle up.
Here's the problem with the 'just deal with the drugs' argument re tariffs:
-As long as the tariff threat remains, it's not cooperative or good faith.
-Notice that the Mexico deal delays tariffs; it doesn't remove them.
-The threat remains to impose new demands soon.
— Philippe Lagassé (@LagasseSubstack) February 3, 2025
The current situation puts Canada is a bind.
If you strike a 'deal' that involves a tariff delay, you're signalling that the tariff threat works to impose compliance on you.
The deal has to be 'fine let's talk' but the tariffs aren't simply delayed.
— Philippe Lagassé (@LagasseSubstack) February 3, 2025
https://t.co/eCiKYXQpFu pic.twitter.com/ph0R81pYQm
— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) February 4, 2025
Ukraine Dispatch
Ukrainian troops in Pokrovsk are losing ground as Russians have begun switching up tactics as they try to take the strategic city, while Ukraine’s logistics are in peril. Ukrainian drone strikes have triggered more fires at oil refineries in Russia. Trump says he wants Ukraine to supply the US with rare earth elements as “equalization” for future aid, because everything is a shakedown. The UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission reports an alarming rise in Russians executing captured Ukrainian soldiers.
The #Astrakhan gas processing plant was attacked in #Russia, according to Andrii Kovalenko, the Head of the Centre for Countering Disinformation.
"This is one of the key #Russian energy facilities that processes gas condensate and produces gasoline, diesel fuel, and more," he… pic.twitter.com/8mBSjL0P3T
— UkraineWorld (@ukraine_world) February 3, 2025
'We need the corps system' — Zelensky approves plan to restructure army.
Ukraine's Armed Forces are transitioning to a new organizational structure intended to modernize the army, President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Feb. 3.https://t.co/p092SQa0Xm
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) February 3, 2025
Good reads:
- The Canadian Press has an explainer on interprovincial trade barriers.
- Here’s a look at how the tariffs may impact the forestry sector.
- European leaders are also discussing amongst each other about Trump’s threats to tariff EU countries as well (because of course he will).
- The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and three other justices are in Victoria as part of the Court’s 150th anniversary tour around the country.
- Doug Ford declared he would “rip up” his agreement with Starlink as retaliation for tariffs, then walked that back once the reprieve was announced.
- Thus far, Manitoba, Yukon and Nunavut are also pausing their retaliatory plans.
- Shannon Proudfoot notes that inclusion of far-right conspiracy-driven outlets now being given space in the White House press room, to build Trump’s alternate reality.
- Paul Wells talks to Cornell University professor Peter Lowen about the trade war, and that Americans largely have the capacity to displace Canadian goods.
Odds and ends:
Today in #cdnpoli https://t.co/e2G5SgIjLi
— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) February 4, 2025
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