Canada's prime minister says the US does not get to dictate terms for a
trade agreement
[April 23, 2026] By
JIM MORRIS
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Canada 's Prime Minister Mark Carney
said Wednesday that Washington doesn't get to dictate the terms of a
continental trade deal known as the United States-Mexico-Canada
Agreement, or USMCA, speaking of obstacles ahead of the accord's review
in July.
The deal, dating back to the early 1990s, has intertwined the economies
of the three North American countries but has faced bumps amid U.S.
President Donald Trump’s constantly changing tariff policy.
Speaking to reporters in Ottawa, Carney said finetuning the latest
version of the agreement “will take some time.”
“We understand what some of the Americans would call trade irritants or
trade issues are,” Carney said. Trade irritants are policies that create
friction and disputes in international trade.
“We have some on our side as well," he added. "We will sit down and work
through those issues with the broader approach in the negotiations."
“It’s not a case of the United States dictates the terms. We have the
negotiations. We can come to a mutually successful outcome," Carney also
said. "It will take some time.”
Carney’s comments came after Radio-Canada, the French-language service
of the Canadian Broadcasting Corp., reported that American officials are
imposing an “entry free” on trade talks with Canada and were demanding
concessions before negotiations begin.

In any negations “people ask for concessions,” Carney said when asked
about the radio report. "We have strengths, we have options. We’re
diversifying our options.”
Last week, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, attacked Canada’s
approach to the trade talks, claiming that Canada leans on the U.S.
economy and that it was “outrageous” for Canadian provinces to keep
American liquor off their shelves.
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Prime Minister Mark Carney arrives on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on
Wednesday, April 22, 2026. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via
AP)
 He also criticized Carney for
striking a deal with China to reduce its 100% tariffs on
Chinese-made electric vehicles to 6.1%, with an annual cap of 49,000
vehicles. In turn, China is expected to lower retaliatory tariffs on
Canadian agricultural products.
A recent report from the Office of the United States Trade
Representative cited as trade irritants the refusal by some Canadian
provinces to stock American alcohol and high tariffs on some
American dairy products.
Carney has promised to protect Canada’s dairy, poultry and egg
production during the free trade talks with the U.S.
The U.S. is also pushing back against the “Buy Canadian” policy,
which gives priority to Canadian products and workers on projects
worth more than 25 million Canadian dollars, or about $18 million.
Carney was asked if is unacceptable that the U.S. hasn’t put
anything on the negotiation table yet.
In a 10-minute video he released Sunday, Carney said Canada’s strong
economic ties to the U.S. were once a strength but are now a
weakness that must be corrected. He said Trump's tariffs have
affected workers in the auto and steel industries.
He also spoke of his government’s efforts to strengthen the Canadian
economy by attracting new investments and signing trade deals with
other countries.
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