Poilievre unveils auto plan aiming for tariff-free access to U.S. market


Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre unveiled the party’s most substantial auto strategy to date under his leadership, which he says will both bring back production to Canada and be “highly attractive” to partners south of the border.

“Canada’s auto sector must stay alive and it must have access to the U.S. to do so,” Poilievre said while in Windsor, Ont., on Sunday.  

Poilievre said he’d like to institute a tariff-free auto pact and has a plan to restore Canada’s auto production to two million cars per year over the next 10 years. 

Also included in the plan is a call to remove the GST on all Canadian-made vehicles, something the NDP and Conservatives proposed during the 2025 general election campaign. 

The proposal was announced amid Poilievre’s first visit to the United States since U.S. President Donald Trump launched his trade war, a significant marker in the Conservative leader’s shifting focus on global trade pressures brought about by the Trump administration. 

“He’s going down there to sell Canada, it’s what we have to do,” Conservative labour critic Kyle Seeback told Rosemary Barton Live. 

Seeback said the purpose of the trip is not to give the impression that there are two prime ministers in Canada.

Rather, he said, with the CUSMA (Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement) review coming up, Poilievre is making the case to U.S. business leaders about the importance of the trading relationship and how tariffs can hurt both countries.

WATCH | Conservative labour critic on the party’s auto plan, Poilievre’s U.S. trip:

Federal Conservatives pitch new auto strategy as tariffs roil industry

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has announced a plan for the hard-hit auto sector that aims to secure tariff-free access to the U.S. market and boost Canada’s auto production. Chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton speaks with Conservative MP Kyle Seeback, the party’s labour critic, about the plan, as well as Poilievre’s U.S. trip.

Will Trump agree?

At the heart of this auto strategy is the push to get Trump to drop tariffs on Canada by selling this strategy as a better way to restore U.S. manufacturing. 

This push rests on the assumption that Trump is open to solving its trade relationship with Canada, despite there being a lack of evidence to suggest willingness on the part of the administration. 

Asked how he’d get Trump to give the green light, Poilievre says his plan addresses the president’s desire to repatriate production to the U.S. and would see a “massive production gain” on both sides of the border.  

A man in a suit shaking hands with another man in a suit as workers look on Poilievre meets with workers and politicians at Cavalier Tool and Manufacturing in Windsor, Ont., on Sunday. (Pratyush Dayal/CBC)

A 1-for-1 car deal

Poilievre laid out a one-for-one deal, where for every car manufactured in Canada, he said, that same producer would get a car to sell duty free from a partner in CUSMA. 

This can be sold as a “win, win,” said Seeback. 

“It’s a better way for the United States to reshore the auto manufacturing in their country while preserving their best export market for autos, which is Canada.”

Seeback says this strategy harkens back to the 1965 auto pact that kick-started free trade between Canada and the U.S., prior to the North American Free Trade Agreement. 

Seeback said this new version of the auto pact would position Canada to be able to harmonize with the U.S. on Chinese electric vehicle policy, part of Poilievre’s strategy to bring “maximum leverage” to the CUSMA review.

“When you put these things together, helping them restore their auto manufacturing, preserving the Canadian market and better alignment on things like Chinese electric vehicles, we actually think there’s an opportunity to get that deal,” said Seeback. 

The federal government recently struck a deal with China to bring tariff relief for Canada’s agricultural and seafood sectors.

In a move that broke ranks with the U.S., Prime Minister Mark Carney agreed to allow up to 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles into Canada, lowering a 100 per cent tariff on imports, imposed in 2024, back to six per cent. 

A tale of three strategies 

The U.S. strategy has been focused on protecting its big three automakers: General Motors, Ford Motor Company and Stellantis. 

To thwart Trump’s protectionist policies, Carney’s approach has been to diversify Canada’s trading partners and look to attract European, Japanese and Korean automakers to Canada. 

Now, more than a year after Trump returned to office, Poilievre is looking to show his plan for dealing with the White House.

For decades, Canada’s sales pitch to the world has rested on having tariff-free access to the U.S. market. Seeback said that if that’s not the case, there’s “not a single producer in the world” that will come to Canada to start new production.

Seeback calls Carney’s approach “managed decline” and said he does not believe it will work. 

Poilievre said that even Mexico would have to accept the plan to avoid ending up with something “much worse.” 

More U.S. meetings ahead

On Friday, Poilievre was in Detroit to meet with senior executives of General Motors and Ford. He crossed the Detroit River back into Canada Sunday to make his auto strategy announcement in Windsor.

His U.S. travel will continue with stops in Texas and New York, with no visit planned for the U.S. capital. 

In an interview on The Paul Wells Show podcast, Poilievre said he updated Carney about his travel plans on the margins on Question Period last Wednesday and plans to debrief him once he returns.

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Auto groups urge Trump to keep Chinese carmakers out of US | WKZO | Everything Kalamazoo


By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, March 13 (Reuters) – Major auto trade groups urged the U.S. government to keep Chinese carmakers out of the country, according to a letter seen by Reuters, potentially complicating President Donald Trump’s planned summit with Chinese ​President Xi Jinping.

The groups raised “serious concerns about China’s ongoing efforts to dominate global ‌automotive manufacturing and to gain access to the U.S. market. These actions pose a direct threat to America’s global competitiveness, national security, and automotive industrial base.”

The five groups representing automakers, car dealers and parts manufacturers called for maintaining a 2025 Commerce Department cybersecurity regulation that effectively keeps nearly all Chinese vehicles ‌out ​of the U.S. market.

The Chinese embassy in Washington rejected ⁠the criticism, saying Chinese-made cars are ⁠popular globally “not by using so-called ‘unfair practices’ but by emerging from the fierce market competition with technological innovation and superb quality. China’s door has been open to global auto companies, including US auto companies who have fully shared in the dividends ​of China’s big market.”

The auto industry letter also criticized Canada’s announcement it would allow some Chinese vehicles into its market.

Trump is expected to visit China from March 31, ⁠as the world’s two biggest economies seek to ⁠maintain the stability that has characterized their relations since late last ​year, after a bruising period marked by Trump’s tariffs and China’s chokehold on rare earths ​exports.

“We also strongly urge the Administration to reject any attempt by Chinese ‌manufacturers to circumvent these existing restrictions by establishing production facilities in the U.S.,” said the letter, dated Thursday, from the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, the National Automobile Dealers Association, Autos Drive America, the American Automotive Policy Council and MEMA, the Vehicle Suppliers Association.

“The market ⁠distortions and risks to the auto industry in the U.S. are fundamentally the same whether these vehicles are imported or produced domestically,” it said.

In January, Trump said he was open ⁠to Chinese automakers building vehicles ‌in the United States. “If they want to come in and ⁠build a plant and hire you and hire your friends and ​your neighbors, ‌that’s great, I love that,” he told the Detroit Economic ​Club.

In December, ⁠the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, which represents General Motors, Ford, Toyota Motor, Volkswagen, Hyundai, Stellantis and other major automakers, said “China poses a clear and present threat to the auto industry in the U.S.” and urged Washington to prevent Chinese government-backed automakers and battery manufacturers from opening U.S. manufacturing plants.

(Reporting by David Shepardson and Parth Chandna; Editing by Alan Barona, Anna ​Driver and William Mallard)

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The Trump Administration Failed the U.S. Auto Industry, and the Canada-China Deal Proves It


On January 16, 2026, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney announced a landmark trade deal with China that will open its market to Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) in exchange for lower tariffs on Canadian-produced canola oil. It’s a major change that could lead to the Canadian market welcoming Chinese-made passenger vehicles at a significantly higher scale and throws into stark relief the consequences of the Trump administration’s reckless trade policy and its large-scale disinvestment in EVs.

The Trump administration’s wrecking-ball approach to traditional forms of international cooperation; its willingness to attack long-time partners and allies with ever more outrageous tariff threats; and its destruction of the U.S. EV supply chain has forced Canada to change its strategy for modernizing and growing its domestic auto industry. Canada has historically been the largest importer of U.S. passenger vehicles. Now, as a direct result of the Trump administration’s actions, Canada’s pivot toward Mexico, China, and elsewhere stands to further isolate the U.S. market as the rest of the world moves decidedly toward a cleaner future. Indeed, if U.S. automakers were already behind Chinese and other international EV producers in terms of technology, production, and price, then the Trump administration’s antics on the world stage will only widen the gap and jeopardize a lucrative export market, to the detriment of American workers and consumers alike.

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What’s in the deal?

Canada and China recently agreed to lower tariffs on Canadian canola oil—from 84 percent to approximately 15 percent by March 1, 2026—in exchange for Canada lowering the tariff rate on Chinese EVs from 100 percent to 6.1 percent on the first 49,000 vehicles, eventually growing to 70,000 over five years. Perhaps more importantly, China will invest in EV production capacity in Canada. While this is more of an understanding than an official agreement at this point, it may turn out to be the most significant component of the deal. Legacy North American automakers lag behind their Chinese counterparts in the maturity of their EV production processes. Landing direct investment in domestic production capacity will allow Canadian participants in the supply chain a significant opportunity to learn from Chinese EV and battery makers and produce affordable cars for Canadian citizens. The new Chinese electric vehicles, whether imported or produced in Canada, are likely to be less expensive than other vehicles produced in North America, which will force North American automakers to innovate and learn in order to remain competitive—preferably not to the detriment of autoworker jobs.

Which parts of the manufacturing process ultimately end up onshored in Canada will matter significantly. China has surged ahead of the rest of the world the further upstream one goes in the supply chain. Localizing battery active material production—cathodes and anodes—would bring more economic value and direct jobs than just final battery pack assembly.

It remains to be seen whether this deal will deliver positive benefits to Canada—although ensuring that any factory that supplies EVs either made in Canada or exported into Canada meets the highest standards for workers’ rights and sustainability would be a good start. But what is clear is that this deal would not have occurred without the Trump administration’s ongoing hostility toward EVs and the U.S.-Canada relationship more broadly.

Why make the deal?

The deal is, no doubt, a calculated risk by the Canadian government, based on two key factors. First, the Trump administration has undermined innovation in the domestic auto industry, gutting investments in EVs and causing domestic automakers to cancel billions of dollars of investment in advanced manufacturing. Second, it has deeply exacerbated trade and diplomatic tensions between Washington and Ottawa. As a result, Canada finds itself with a need to reduce its dependency on and integration with the United States to reclaim control over its economy and industrial future. It is a message that Mark Carney, Canada’s prime minister, delivered to his country via video message a few days after signing the agreement with China.

On the future of the auto sector in the United States, it is hard to question the Canadian government’s assessment. One of the first actions taken by the Trump administration, starting with a day-one executive order, was to launch an all-out attack on American EV manufacturing, directing the government to “eliminate the ‘electric vehicle (EV) mandate’,” despite no such mandate existing. Less than a month later, the administration unilaterally and unlawfully froze billions of dollars of funding for everything from EV charger installation to critical mineral processing for batteries, including funds for which the government had already signed contracts with American companies. Finally, in July, the president signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and delivered the coup de grâce for the future auto industry, repealing tax credits for EVs made in North America and hamstringing government support for American battery manufacturing. High-quality EVs have an average cost of $25,000 in China, but instead of helping American automakers offer a similarly affordable vehicle, the administration has held them back. NPR captured it succinctly in December:

California’s ability to require the sale of EVs: gone. Federal rules about emissions and fuel economy — being rewritten. Federal penalties for car companies that sell too many gas guzzlers: zeroed out. The $7,500 federal tax credit? Kaput.

These actions have already caused damage. Ford took a $19.5 billion write-down scaling back its plans for EV production, while GM took a $6 billion hit. As of the end of the third quarter of 2025, EV supply chain investment was down 30 percent from that point a year earlier. These cancellations won’t just hurt the United States and American workers but also Canada. The auto industry is not an American industry; it’s a North American industry, with the region that includes Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, and Ontario often referred to as the “Great Lakes supercluster.” As described in a recent report to Congress, “Across the region, hundreds of suppliers provide thousands of parts for vehicles, some of which cross the border seven or eight times as they are assembled into larger products.” The industry is deeply intertwined, so major changes in the United States will significantly affect both Canada and Mexico. Without a strong automotive industry—along with all the supplier industries that serve the auto industry—Canada’s industrial future would be far weaker and far less resilient to the vagaries of policy choices in the United States and elsewhere.

Without a strong automotive industry, Canada’s industrial future would be far weaker and far less resilient to the vagaries of policy choices in the United States and elsewhere.

Canada and the United States have had a remarkably close relationship, consistently sharing economic and foreign policy goals over generations. In 2023, more than $2.5 billion in goods and services crossed the U.S.-Canada border each day. In all likelihood, Ottawa would like to maintain this close relationship and economic integration as much as possible, but as Carney noted in his recent speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Canada must react to the world as it is—not the world it wishes existed. And the current world is defined by the brazen tariff threats and toxic nationalism of the Trump administration.

In just its first year in office, the Trump administration has ushered in a trade war unprecedented in its size and scale, imposing new tariffs on nearly every nation and on roughly half the goods entering the United States. In addition to tariffs, the Trump administration has done its best to antagonize Canada, from referring to Canada as the “51st state” and Prime Minister Carney as “Governor Carney” to reportedly meeting with Albertan separatists. As a result, Canada has come to view the United States not as a partner or ally but as a belligerent nation that no longer shares its interests and values—at least not as long as the Trump administration is in the White House.

What about U.S. manufacturing?

Allowing Chinese EVs into the Canadian market, albeit in limited numbers at first, will place massive pressure on American automakers to catch up technologically—which would be the best-case outcome. There are some positive signs that this is happening, such as GM’s investment in new battery technologies. However, if U.S. automakers choose instead to cede the market entirely, then that loss will be felt directly in the U.S. labor market. As the United States has deprioritized affordable EVs—and affordable vehicles in general—China has kept up its massive push to build and adopt EVs. More than half of new cars sold in China are now EVs, accounting for roughly 70 percent of global EV production. This global EV adoption is helping change the trajectory of global oil demand to peak in five years. And it’s not just China, with countries like India electrifying even faster.

There is no turning away from an electrified future for passenger vehicles unless the goal is to condemn people to a future of more expensive cars and fewer jobs.

This means that Canada is a canary in the coal mine for U.S. automakers. If they cannot build and sell EVs to compete with those manufactured by their competitors in a market physically next door—and one that was previously accustomed to buying U.S.-made vehicles—then there is little hope of them competing in a broader world that is rapidly electrifying. One in 4 vehicles sold in 2025 was electric; making a cost-competitive EV is not optional for automakers who want to retain significant market share. Should American automakers fail to do so, autoworkers and U.S. industry more broadly would likely be the first to suffer the consequences.

On the campaign trail, President Trump wildly claimed that “all the electric cars are going to be made in China.” This isn’t likely to become true with other parts of the world such as Europe shifting toward EV production, but what may be true is that significant numbers won’t be made in the United States, which will be a problem when the rest of the world ultimately decides EVs are the way to go. Investors want to invest in industries of the future, and workers need training in those industries now. But instead of recognizing this future—one that Canada clearly does—President Trump appears focused on keeping American auto manufacturing stuck in the past. If he is successful, those investors won’t invest in the U.S. auto industry, and there will be fewer workers in it as a result.

Conclusion

In only a year, the Trump administration’s reckless policies forced a dilemma upon Canada: Continue to be tied to a historic trading partner whose current leadership has decided to hold its own—and, by extension, Canada’s—industry back from producing innovative EVs, or make a deal with China, a competitor leading in the EV industry.

Canada has made a choice to welcome Chinese EVs today, and that should be a wake-up call: There is no turning away from an electrified future for passenger vehicles unless the goal is to condemn people to a future of more expensive cars and fewer jobs. The rest of the world is moving on to cheaper, cleaner vehicles. If the United States wants to produce the vehicles the world wants, as it should, then the country must return to investing in electric vehicle production and an associated supply chain. Nearly 1 million direct jobs are at stake. The Trump administration, and U.S. automakers, should stop seeing the world they wish to see and start seeing the world as it is. Otherwise, U.S. autoworkers and consumers are going to pay the price. A continuation of the Trump administration’s toxicity on the world stage and its backward auto and energy policy would only mean more deals like the one Canada and China agreed to a few weeks ago.

The authors would like to thank Kalina Gibson, Allison McManus, Steve Bonitatibus, and Mona Alsaidi for their feedback, guidance, and support on this column.

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