Canada one of the ânastiestâ countries to deal with, Trump says during inflammatory Fox News appearance

Posted March 19, 2025 11:59 am.
When Ontario Premier Doug Ford emerged from a meeting with U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick in Washington last week, he said the âtemperature has been loweredâ between the two nations in the midst of an economy-damaging trade war.
On Tuesday night, U.S. President Donald Trump cranked up the heat.
Trump continued his inflammatory comments directed at Canada during an interview with Laura Ingraham on her Fox News political show âThe Ingraham Angle,â maintaining that Canada has treated the U.S. unfairly and is âmeantâ to be the 51st state.
âHereâs my problem with Canada,â Trump seethed. âCanada was meant to be the 51st state because we subsidize Canada by $200 billion a year. We donât need their cars, we donât need their lumber, we have a lot of lumber.
âWe donât need their energy, we donât need anything, we certainly donât want their automobiles ⊠millions of automobiles are sent in, Iâd rather have them made in Michigan, Iâd rather have them made in South Carolina.â
Ingraham pushed back, saying the trade deficit with Canada is actually $60 billion. She also pointed out that Trump is âtougher with Canada than you are with some of our biggest adversaries.â
âWhy?â she asked.
âBecause itâs meant to be our 51st state,â he shot back before directing his anger at the previous Trudeau administration.
âI deal with every country indirectly or directly, one of the nastiest countries to deal with is Canada. Now this was Trudeau ⊠good old Justin, I call him Governor Trudeau, his people were nasty and they werenât telling the truth, they never tell the truth. Theyâd say âwe donât charge,â well they do, they charge tremendous.â
Trump cited his oft-repeated claim that Canada has a 250 per cent tariff on dairy products, without mentioning that it is only applied if a considerable quota is exceeded â or that he signed off on that deal himself during his first term as President.
The U.S. also has similar tariff-rate quotas in place on commodities such as sugar, an international trade attorney told the Canadian Press recently.
When Ingraham asked Trump straight up what his end game is, he replied: âMy end game is I donât want to have a big deficit. I donât want to see the United States of America, and you say $60 billion and I say $200 billion â it doesnât matter â I donât want us to pay $60 billion or $200 billion dollars to a country, that if they were a state, it would be our biggest, most beautiful, it would be great.â
âThis state, it would be cherished, weâd take care of it, the people would pay half of what theyâre paying now. Canada pays very little for defence,â he added. âThey think weâre going to defend them.â
âIâd rather deal with a Liberalâ
Trump also weighed in on Canadaâs looming federal election after Ingraham pointed out that his trade stance has helped propel the Liberal Party, run by Prime Minister Mark Carney, into a sudden lead in the polls over former favourite, Conservative Pierre Poilievre.
âI donât care,â Trump said, brushing it off. âI donât care. Iâd rather deal with a Liberal than a Conservative.
âThat Conservative thatâs running is stupidly no friend of mine,â he added. âI donât know him, but heâs said negative things. I think its easier to deal, actually, with a Liberal.â
Poilievre was quick to try and capitalize on Trumpâs words, saying in a social media post that they were further evidence that he will be tougher on Trump than Carney and will be the best candidate to put âCanada first.â
Last night, President Donald Trump endorsed Mark Carney.
â Pierre Poilievre (@PierrePoilievre) March 19, 2025
Why? Because, as Trump said, heâs âeasierâ to deal with, and knows that I will be a tough negotiator and always put Canada First. Carney is weak and would cave to Trumpâs demands, just like he did when he moved his company⊠pic.twitter.com/Dv6FgyyLYg
Carney demands respect
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, meanwhile, has stressed he wonât sit down and talk to Trump on trade until he ceases his âdisrespectfulâ comments about Canada â something Trump clearly didnât heed during Tuesday nightâs Fox appearance.
âWeâve called out those comments. Theyâre disrespectful, theyâre not helpful, and they need to stop,â Carney said earlier this week in London, on the second part of a one-day trip to France and the U.K.
âThey will have to stop before we sit down and have a conversation about our broader partnership with the United States.â
âI donât think one needs to respond to every comment about another country,â he added. âCanada is strong, we can stand up for ourselves.â
Foreign Affairs Minister MĂ©lanie Joly shared a similar distaste for Trumpâs annexation threats at a closing news conference of the G7 foreign ministers meeting last Friday.
âWhat I said to the secretary is Canadaâs sovereignty is not up to debate, period,â Joly said.
âThereâs no argument, thereâs no conversation about it, thereâs no need to talk about it,â she said. âYouâre here, you respect us, you respect our sovereignty, youâre in our country, you respect our people. Period.â
With files from The Canadian Press