Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he is considering Buy Ontario legislation in the face of threatened tariffs from the United States.
President Donald Trump has said Tuesday would be the day he puts tariffs of 25 per cent on Canadian goods into effect, with a lower 10 per cent levy on energy.
Get daily National news
Speaking to a mining conference in Toronto just days after winning a third majority government, Ford said he is prepared to follow through with previously announced measures to respond to tariffs, including removing American alcohol from Liquor Control Board of Ontario shelves and ripping up a $100-million deal with Elon Musk’s SpaceX for Starlink internet in remote areas.
- As Alberta battles with separation, Saskatchewan’s Moe affirms party wants to stay
- Ontario set to finally pass municipal code of conduct, councillor reforms
- B.C. family walks 120 km to raise money, awareness for son’s gene therapy
- Advocates warn Quebec deportations are separating families, urge federal intervention
Today he also says he is urging consumers, retailers and municipalities to source goods from Ontario, and from elsewhere in Canada if they can’t be found in the province.
He says he is “asking politely” before he implements legislation.
Energy Minister Stephen Lecce also says Ontario is looking at a surcharge on every megawatt of energy the Americans buy from the province.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.