Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Doug Ford burns his fingers playing with the big boys

Ontario Premier Doug Ford has tried his level best to insert himself forcibly into the conversation around US tariffs ever since Trump was elected (and even before). Although he is merely a lowly provincial premier, he clearly has national pretentions, and likes to be thought of as "Captain Canada".

A good part of the shtick he used to get himself re-elected last month revolved around his claim that he was the best Ontario leader to deal with the existential threat that Trump represents. He has travelled to the US many times to speak to US representatives, industry leaders and media outlets, although he has rarely been invited to speak to the higher-ups, the actual movers and shakers in this particularly sordid phase of American politics.

However, Ford's hankering to be seen as Captain Canada took a bit of a blow yesterday, when he went toe to toe with Donald Trump and came off with egg on his face. In the face of Trump's announcement of a 25% tariff on Canadian steel and aluminum, Ford gave it his best shot and announced a 25% surchage on electricity exports from Ontario to three US states, Minnesota, Michigan and New York.

Clearly expecting Trump to back off and walk back his tariff announcement after this masterful play, Trump, almost predictably, immediately doubled his tariffs to 50%. Ford then announced that he was abandoning his electricity surcharge, and the Americans, in their turn, reduced the steel and aluminum tariffs back to the original 25%.

Good game. Trump 1 - Ford 0. Net result: the 25% tariffs remain. But Trump can do this stuff all day, he positively lives for it, and Ford came off looking rather foolish, with his tail firmly between his legs.

Ford is off to Washington again today to speak to the underlings (Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick this time), chaperoned by federal Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc. But I have a suspicion that Mark Carney and the federal government would much rather Ford butt out of matters beyond his pay grade, and maybe just leave it to the grown-ups. 

The federal government has already announced proportionate retaliatory tariffs on $29.8 billion of American goods. Does Ford really need to be poking his nose in and complicating things, even if Trump does think of him as a "strong man"?

A day later, Trump mused out loud that maybe the USA shouldn't be buying ANY electricity from Canada, the exact opposite of what Ford has been pitching for months. So, careful what you do and say, Dougie, it might come back and bite you (and us, the hapless residents of Ontario, that you're supposed to be protecting).

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