‘Willful negligence’: Trump threatens Canada with tariff hike over wildfire smoke
"We are holding Canada responsible… the United States is being unnecessarily invaded by filthy, polluted, and unhealthy air, the quality of which is dangerous, and totally unacceptable!" – President Donald J. Trump 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/LVsFinBcg1
Congressional Republicans echoed the accusation. Ohio Senator Bernie Moreno said he’d introduce legislation targeting Canadian officials, arguing the country has under-invested in prevention work like forest thinning and controlled burns. Michigan House Republicans went further, warning Washington could act on its own “to protect our people” if Canada doesn’t step up.
Canadian leaders rejected the framing. Carney said fighting climate change is a responsibility shared by every country, not Canada’s alone. Ontario Premier Doug Ford was blunter, suggesting the US send firefighting help instead of complaints, pointing out Canada has aided American wildfire efforts before.
What the criticism leaves out is that the US has its own fires driving smoke both ways: a blaze in northern Minnesota has already burned more than 63,000 acres, with additional fires reported across Oregon, Washington and Idaho. US wildfire acreage this year is running well above the 10-year average, and land burned annually has more than doubled over the past three decades.
The clash adds another layer to strained US-Canada trade relations. A Supreme Court ruling limiting Trump’s emergency tariff powers has forced the administration onto slower, investigation-based tariff processes, even as it has declined to renew USMCA in its current form leaving the broader trade relationship in limbo heading into the rest of the year.
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