Canada’s strategy: giving Trump a way to win while he also backs down
WASHINGTON — In order to persuade Donald Trump to eventually drop his punishing steel and aluminum tariffs and finally agree to a renegotiated NAFTA, Canada’s strategy is to somehow engineer a way for the U.S. president to claim a political victory by doing just that.
That’s the only way forward, now that Trump has triggered a sprawling trade war by imposing import duties of 25 per cent on steel and 10 per cent on aluminum from Canada, Mexico and Europe, multiple sources familiar with Ottawa’s position told The Canadian Press.
Getting the president to walk back from the line he drew in the sand Thursday won’t be easy, they acknowledge. But over time, Trump must be persuaded that to do so is in his political interest — because the approach he’s chosen will do more economic harm than good.
Sources say Trump will eventually have to consider the combination of the strong internal Republican and American business opposition to the tariffs, as well as the simple passage of time as the negative effects eventually trickle down to U.S. consumers.


