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CAN-USA 2025 Tariff Strife (split from various pol threads)

Team Canada Quebec

Time for Quebec to join Canada. If they do not then say goodby to 2025-26 $13.6 billion, up a quarter billion from 2024-25 in annual equalization payments. This is included in the 2025-26 $29.3 billion through major transfers to Quebec.

Look at the savings. Nothing would have to be translated from English, you would not have to have a language profile for promotion, etc, etc.


Y.F Blanchet says he strongly opposes ANY pipeline from Western Canada through Quebec to the the Atlantic...Because it would sacrifice the prosperity and undermine the sovereignty of Quebec.




Right then.

Hudson's Bay it is then.

Self financing with the money not being shared with Quebec.
 
They may be different than other countries or not to the same extent, but, the US has restrictions or limitations on the movement of goods, services and labour between states. They just don't like other nations' protections. It is similar to the myth that their agricultural sector isn't subsidized.
Don't disagree, but this isn't about what they do, it's about what other countries do to restrict trade. Logic does not apply.
 
Team Canada Quebec

Time for Quebec to join Canada. If they do not then say goodby to 2025-26 $13.6 billion, up a quarter billion from 2024-25 in annual equalization payments. This is included in the 2025-26 $29.3 billion through major transfers to Quebec.

Look at the savings. Nothing would have to be translated from English, you would not have to have a language profile for promotion, etc, etc.


Y.F Blanchet says he strongly opposes ANY pipeline from Western Canada through Quebec to the the Atlantic...Because it would sacrifice the prosperity and undermine the sovereignty of Quebec.





Demand for cheap, clean hydropower is soaring. Can Quebec keep up?​

Low water levels forced Hydro-Quebec to cut electricity exports last year​


Benjamin Shingler · CBC News · Posted: Aug 31, 2024 2:00 AM MDT | Last Updated: August 31, 2024

the public utility's reservoir levels fell far below average in 2023, during an unusually hot and dry year across Canada,
In its annual report, Hydro-Quebec blamed "scant snow cover" as well as "lower-than-usual spring runoff and modest summer and fall precipitation in northern Quebec" for the lower than usual "inflows to the company's large reservoirs."

That meant the public utility was forced to cut back exports last year to 23 Terawatt hours (TWh) — about nine per cent less than the year prior.

B.C.
Hydro was even worse off, and was forced to import more power from the U.S. last year because of dry conditions. Manitoba's hydro production also dropped by 12 per cent.
Overall, exports to the U.S. from Canada fell nearly 25 per cent last year, to the lowest level since 2016.

Just a reminder where all that water came from

1738869995960.png 1738870081437.png1738870205444.png

8500 Years ago Northern Quebec, Hudson's Bay and The Barren Lands were one big glacier.
7000 Years ago Hudson's Bay was open water seasonally but the Barren Lands and Northern Quebec were two separate glaciers.
5000 Years ago The Barren Lands, Northern Quebec and Hudson's Bay looked pretty much like today as all the ice had melted and created lakes.

Those lakes are the ones we are emptying today.

And all of the rivers that run east west, especially those fed from the Rocky Mountain spine, have been drying up from south to north as the mountain glaciers all melted over the last 10,000 years.

Hydro is not a reliable source of energy.
 
Movement from the Natural Resources Minister


But


Which led Lorne Gunter to ask this:

When Alberta Premier Danielle Smith stood alone after the first emergency tariff summit of premiers and the prime minister in January — when she refused to sign their joint statement — she was roundly criticized (and unjustly so) for not going along with the national consensus.

So how come Legault isn’t facing similar criticism for undermining national efforts to strengthen the economy and nation?
 
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This kind of inflexibility irritates the Americans, and also resulted in Britain walking away from free trade talks:


It's unfortunate, but there will be some pain to some industries to protect the rest of Canada from punitive tariffs.

Bad move for negotiations. Never, say no. Once you say no, and you walk, you close all options to find a win win. There may be new ideas or compromises but you just put it all in the shitter.

Talk not walk. It's why good negotiations take time and patience

All she has done is put Trump’s back up, given him more reason to retaliate and created a rift in a very important area of trade talks. Such an amateur move made by a Trade Minister.
 
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