US Treasury chief urges Canada, Mexico to match tariffs on China
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WASHINGTON—US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent encouraged Canada on Friday to follow Mexico in matching US tariffs on Chinese goods as the two US neighbors sought to avoid punishing 25-percent US tariffs due on Tuesday over fentanyl trafficking.
Canadian and Mexican officials have fanned out across Washington seeking to show President Donald Trump’s administration that they were making progress in securing their US borders to curb the flow of the dangerous opioid.
Bessent, speaking in a Bloomberg Television interview, said Mexico had proposed matching the US tariffs aimed at China, but he did not specify which level.
Trump on Feb. 4 imposed a 10-percent duty on all Chinese imports, then said on Thursday he would double that to 20 percent from Tuesday.
“I think it would be a nice gesture if the Canadians did it also—so in a way, we could have fortress North America from the flood of Chinese imports that’s coming out of the most unbalanced economy in the history of modern times,” Bessent said.
‘Not the right way’
China’s embassy in Washington said Trump’s unilateral tariff hikes would severely violate World Trade Organization rules and hurt both Chinese and US interests.
“Pressuring, coercion and threat is not the right way to deal with China. Instead, mutual respect is the basic prerequisite,” embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said in a statement to Reuters.
The Mexican and Canadian governments did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Bessent’s remarks.
Canadian Public Safety Minister David McGuinty said at the end of a four-day visit to Washington that he continued to communicate with the Trump administration that Canada was acting swiftly to secure its borders.
“We’ve made some very serious adjustments, investments, improvements on the border, and we spent the entire week for four days of meetings, communicating those results, communicating those improvements to our counterparts here in Washington,” McGuinty told reporters after meeting with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and border czar Tom Homan.
Mexican Economy Minister Marcelo Ebrard said he had a “cordial working meeting” with US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer.
In a post on X, Ebrard said the United States and Mexico “have a great future working together” but offered no details on discussions over the US tariff deadline.
Trump cited insufficient progress in reducing fentanyl overdose deaths in the United States for the planned duties on more than $900 billion worth of annual imports from Canada and Mexico.
Drug suspects extradited
Mexico on Thursday staged its largest mass extradition of suspected drug cartel members in 10 years, including a 1980s kingpin who spent decades in prison for the murder of a US drug enforcement agent and 28 other suspects.
Rafael Caro Quintero, 72, pleaded not guilty on Friday in federal court in New York on US drug trafficking charges that could result in his execution. The other extradited suspects included younger leaders accused of moving fentanyl into the United States.
Mexico’s Deputy Economy Minister Vidal Llerenas said on Thursday that Mexico could adopt other trade measures beyond the recent tariffs it imposed on certain imports to reduce low-value shipments from China.
The United States earlier this month moved to suspend the “de minimis” duty-free exemption for packages valued below $800 that has allowed fentanyl and its precursor chemicals to arrive unscreened through US airports and border crossings.
But as packages piled up, the US Customs and Border Protection agency paused the suspension until it could put effective screening measures in place.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 72,776 people died from synthetic opioids in 2023 in the United States, chiefly from fentanyl.
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