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A ''Buy Canadian Instead'' sign is displayed on top of bottles, hanging above another sign that reads "American Whiskey," at a B.C. Liquor Store in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Canadians take aim at US businesses
Even before Trump’s tariff announcement on Wednesday, Canadian consumers were engaged in a grassroots trade war aimed at hurting American companies.
The “Buy Canadian” movement — which emerged out of Canadian anger at Donald Trump’s trade provocations and annexation threats — is hitting a growing number of American consumer firms. Canadian governments have pulled American liquor, beer, and wine from the shelves, and Canadian consumers have been scorning US products, with retailers delivering the bad news to suppliers. Half of the businesses making efforts to highlight Canadian-made goods reported last month that they had already seen a 50% increase in demand for Canadian products.
The trade tensions have also hit American tourism operators as Canadian snowbirds shift to other sunny destinations, reducing cross-border bookings by 70% this spring and summer. Canadians represent the largest group of international visitors to the United States, so a continued decline could hit US businesses hard.
Canadians made about 20.2 million visits to the U.S. in 2024. A 10% reduction could cost $2 billion and 14,000 jobs, according to a US trade group. There is no reason to think this will end anytime soon. Canadians are increasingly concerned about how they will be treated, and the Trump administration doesn’t seem to mind.
“Canadians will no longer have to worry about the inconveniences of international travel when they become American citizens as residents of our cherished 51st state,” White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly told the Wall Street Journal.
Canadians will be hoping that pressure on US businesses will eventually make the White House change its tune.
The Graphic Truth: Tourists trickle back into the US
The global tourism industry got pummeled during the pandemic. Economies reliant on international visitors for a large chunk of their GDP were hit particularly hard. But after more than two years of restrictions, scenes at airports around the world today suggest that the travel bug is back. Still, looking at data from the US — a top destination for global travelers — it’s clear that the revival will be slow going. We take a look at international arrivals to the US from 2000 to March 2022.
This comes to you from the Signal newsletter team of GZERO Media. Subscribe for your free daily Signal today.
Biden's UN speech avoids China mention; US lifts travel restrictions
Ian Bremmer shares his insights on global politics this week with a look at US President Biden's UN General Assembly speech, eased US travel restrictions, and Canadian PM Trudeau's election gamble.
How did President Biden's first address to the United Nations General Assembly live go?
It was okay. I thought it was very notable that China was not directly mentioned at all. So my mother used to say, if you don't have anything nice to say, don't say anything. Did say that the US didn't want to be in a "Cold War". That's notable, because a lot of people out there are pushing in that direction in the US and in China. Certainly it was all about multilateral leadership. The Americans want to do more. We want collective leadership. We care about values. We care about democracy, but increasingly not seen as credible by a number of Europeans, as well as by the developing world, particularly when it comes to Afghanistan, COVID, and climate. Can't just say the words, have to have a pathway to get there. It's getting more challenging for the Americans. This is a tough UNGA meeting.
The US is to lift pandemic travel restrictions. What will happen after that?
Well, thank God we're finally doing that. In November, if you're vaccinated, you can come to the United States. It's like 550 days that the Europeans weren't allowed to come to the US. And I understood why we put that in place at the beginning, but with sort of COVID cases expanding directly in the United States and people getting vaccinated all over the place, we need to be able to travel again. It's important. And frankly, it was the Paris dust-up and the withdrawal, or the recall of the ambassador that got the Americans to move more quickly. So thanks to Paris for that. Usually this stuff is just symbolic.
Did Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's election gamble pay off?
Well, sort of. I mean in the sense that he had an election and he got the same exact result that they had before, minority government does extend his term. So that's useful from his perspective. They spent/wasted 600 million Canadian dollars on it, which is nothing compared to the United States. In Canada, that's considered to be kind of crying foul. A lot of people didn't want the election. And I don't think policies are going to change one bit, but I do applaud the Canadians for having an election where nothing happened. If only that could happen in the United States.