Parliament Hill, not Capitol Hill, central to Canada’s latest tariff strategy
WASHINGTON — Canada’s trade-versus-tariffs drama with the United States has entered its third act, and the scenery has changed — from Capitol Hill to Parliament Hill.
For months, the iconic silhouette of the U.S. Congress has been a fitting and familiar backdrop for marathon Canadian lobbying efforts on two fronts: ending President Donald Trump’s levies on steel and aluminum from north of the border and ratifying the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.
Now, those two storylines are on a collision course — not in Washington but in Ottawa, which is what U.S. Ambassador David MacNaughton was hoping to gently point out Thursday when he suddenly predicted that an end to the tariff standoff was only weeks away.