After a year of nice, Trump brings Trudeau to brink of trade war

Reuters  |  QUEBEC CITY, Quebec 

By and Roberta Rampton

Besides the escalated risk of a trade war, Trump's blistering personal attack on Trudeau poses domestic economic and political risks for the Canadian prime minister, who has stuck to a conciliatory stance in the face of U.S. threats on NAFTA and other bilateral trade cases.

"PM of acted so meek and mild during our @meetings only to give a conference after I left saying that, 'U.S. Tariffs were kind of insulting' and he 'will not be pushed around.' Very dishonest & weak," Trump tweeted as he flew to a summit on

The attack shattered any hope that could avoid U.S. tariffs on and aluminum or renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement by virtue of the charm, patience or measured response it has extended to Trump since he took office.

Trudeau's office, reeling from the abrupt Trump reversal hours after the two men had joked and smiled their way through a fractious meeting, said only that Trudeau had said nothing in his conference that he hadn't said before.

"Canadians are polite, we're reasonable, but we also will not be pushed around," Trudeau had told reporters as he reiterated that would retaliate against U.S. tariffs on and aluminum, adding Trump's rationale had been insulting.

While the two men have had several seemingly congenial meetings and phone calls since Trump took office, they could not be more different in terms of policy, with Trudeau a progressive liberal, outspoken on feminism and the merits of diversity and who was close to former

Earlier in the day, Trudeau had sniped about Trump's late appearance at a women's empowerment breakfast, referring to "stragglers".

Trump's about-face sparked dismay and anger among Canadian and American free trade advocates alike.

"To our allies: bipartisan majorities of Americans remain pro-free trade, pro-globalization & supportive of alliances based on 70 years of shared values. Americans stand with you, even if our doesn't," U.S. Republican Senator tweeted after Trump on Saturday.

Trudeau's former foreign policy advisor, lashed out at the U.S. president.

"Big tough guy once he's back on his airplane. Can't do it in person, and knows it, which makes him feel weak. So he projects these feelings onto Trudeau and then lashes out at him," Paris tweeted.

Trade experts who have watched Trump negotiate with tough words on before said the bark of Trump's tweets often exceeds the bite of his policy - but that this time, Canada might struggle to respond.

"The rhetoric has far outpaced the implementation," said Geoffrey Gertz, with think tank in "Now we might be at a turning point ... (Canadians are) a little bit at a loss right now to figure out what to do."

But while Trudeau's months-long effort to reach out to U.S. politicians and business leaders at every jurisdiction and level may not have won over Trump, it may pay dividends if Trump's attack finally spurs support from business groups or

Republicans worry the dispute with Canada could become an issue in trade-dependent farm states ahead of November

"There's some movement within now to rein in Trump on trade policy," Gertz said.

During the summit, Trump had changed the photo on his page to the "family photo" taken with other leaders. Somewhere over the Atlantic, minutes after attacking Trudeau, he swapped that for a photo with soldiers saluting during the national anthem.

(Additional reporting by in LA MALBAIE, Quebec; Editing by and Michael Perry)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, June 10 2018. 08:56 IST