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U.S. President Donald Trump’s on-again, off-again trade measures dominated headlines, rattled markets, reshaped Canada’s trade behaviour, and even influenced our federal election. From disrupted supply chains to cancelled U.S. trips and American booze left on shelves, the ripple effects were felt coast to coast.
The silver lining? Thanks to the USMCA, most Canadian exports still crossed the border tariff-free.The concern? That agreement comes up for review next year — and Trump remains in the White House until at least 2029. Translation: more volatility likely ahead.
Here’s a snapshot of the year that was 👇
🗓️ January – It Begins
Trump announces sweeping 25% tariffs on Canadian and Mexican goods, citing border security and drugs.
🗓️ February – Or Not?
A last-minute 30-day pause, followed quickly by new steel and aluminum tariffs.
🗓️ March – A Double Whammy
Blanket tariffs hit, lifted briefly, then replaced with targeted hits on steel, aluminum, and autos.Canada fires back with $60B in retaliatory tariffs.
🗓️ April – “Liberation Day”
A dramatic rollout of “reciprocal tariffs” on nearly every U.S. trading partner.Canada narrowly dodges the worst — for now.
🗓️ May – Law & Order
A U.S. court rules Trump’s emergency tariffs illegal. Appeals follow. Tariffs stay… temporarily.
🗓️ June – Trade Talks Collapse
Steel and aluminum tariffs jump to 50%.Canada scraps its digital services tax to keep talks alive.
🗓️ July – No Deal
Tariffs on Canadian exports spike to 35%, with fentanyl cited again.
🗓️ August – Olive Branch
Canada eases some retaliatory tariffs.The U.S. responds by expanding its tariff list — including copper.
🗓️ September – Olive Branch Rejected
New tariffs rain down:🏗️ Softwood lumber💊 Pharmaceuticals🚚 Heavy trucks🪑 Furniture & cabinets
🗓️ October – Diplomacy Derails
A friendly Oval Office meeting undone by Ontario’s Reagan-inspired anti-tariff ad.Talks suspended. More tariff threats follow.
🗓️ November – Legal Uncertainty
The Supreme Court weighs in. Justices appear skeptical. Final ruling pushed to 2026.
🗓️ December – A Breather
Aside from vague fertilizer threats, no new tariffs emerge.After 12 months of trade-war turbulence, Canadians catch their breath.
🔎 Why This Matters
Trade uncertainty affects jobs, inflation, housing costs, construction materials, and long-term investment confidence. As we head into 2026, businesses, investors, and policymakers must prepare for continued trade volatility — especially with the USMCA review on the horizon.
One thing is clear: tariffs weren’t just policy headlines in 2025 — they were a defining force in Canada’s economic story.
🇨🇦📉📈
#Canada2025 #Tariffs #TradeWar #USMCA #CanadaUSRelations #EconomicOutlook #Markets #PolicyMatters #SupplyChains #InflationWatch #CanadianEconomy
By MandeepToorU.S. President Donald Trump’s on-again, off-again trade measures dominated headlines, rattled markets, reshaped Canada’s trade behaviour, and even influenced our federal election. From disrupted supply chains to cancelled U.S. trips and American booze left on shelves, the ripple effects were felt coast to coast.
The silver lining? Thanks to the USMCA, most Canadian exports still crossed the border tariff-free.The concern? That agreement comes up for review next year — and Trump remains in the White House until at least 2029. Translation: more volatility likely ahead.
Here’s a snapshot of the year that was 👇
🗓️ January – It Begins
Trump announces sweeping 25% tariffs on Canadian and Mexican goods, citing border security and drugs.
🗓️ February – Or Not?
A last-minute 30-day pause, followed quickly by new steel and aluminum tariffs.
🗓️ March – A Double Whammy
Blanket tariffs hit, lifted briefly, then replaced with targeted hits on steel, aluminum, and autos.Canada fires back with $60B in retaliatory tariffs.
🗓️ April – “Liberation Day”
A dramatic rollout of “reciprocal tariffs” on nearly every U.S. trading partner.Canada narrowly dodges the worst — for now.
🗓️ May – Law & Order
A U.S. court rules Trump’s emergency tariffs illegal. Appeals follow. Tariffs stay… temporarily.
🗓️ June – Trade Talks Collapse
Steel and aluminum tariffs jump to 50%.Canada scraps its digital services tax to keep talks alive.
🗓️ July – No Deal
Tariffs on Canadian exports spike to 35%, with fentanyl cited again.
🗓️ August – Olive Branch
Canada eases some retaliatory tariffs.The U.S. responds by expanding its tariff list — including copper.
🗓️ September – Olive Branch Rejected
New tariffs rain down:🏗️ Softwood lumber💊 Pharmaceuticals🚚 Heavy trucks🪑 Furniture & cabinets
🗓️ October – Diplomacy Derails
A friendly Oval Office meeting undone by Ontario’s Reagan-inspired anti-tariff ad.Talks suspended. More tariff threats follow.
🗓️ November – Legal Uncertainty
The Supreme Court weighs in. Justices appear skeptical. Final ruling pushed to 2026.
🗓️ December – A Breather
Aside from vague fertilizer threats, no new tariffs emerge.After 12 months of trade-war turbulence, Canadians catch their breath.
🔎 Why This Matters
Trade uncertainty affects jobs, inflation, housing costs, construction materials, and long-term investment confidence. As we head into 2026, businesses, investors, and policymakers must prepare for continued trade volatility — especially with the USMCA review on the horizon.
One thing is clear: tariffs weren’t just policy headlines in 2025 — they were a defining force in Canada’s economic story.
🇨🇦📉📈
#Canada2025 #Tariffs #TradeWar #USMCA #CanadaUSRelations #EconomicOutlook #Markets #PolicyMatters #SupplyChains #InflationWatch #CanadianEconomy