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Sorry Mexico, step aside China; it's Canada's turn to get blasted by Trump

President Donald Trump speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 25, 2017, during the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's National Days of Remembrance ceremony.
President Donald Trump speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 25, 2017, during the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's National Days of Remembrance ceremony. Photo by The Associated Press/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

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Step aside, China and Mexico: Canada is now U.S. President Donald Trump's whipping-boy-du-jour on trade, something he made abundantly clear Tuesday with a tweet, a tax, a threat, a scolding and a familiar faux-compliment he used to lavish on others.

A preferred Trump tactic is to compliment sly foreigners for outfoxing his supposedly dim-witted presidential predecessors in trade deals. In the 1990s, he said it about Japan. More recently, it was China and Mexico.

Now, as NAFTA negotiations approach, it's the hockey-happy moose haven to the north that's pulled a fast one, he suggested Tuesday, one day after he announced a 20 per cent duty on softwood lumber.

"People don't realize Canada's been very rough on the United States. Everyone thinks of Canada as being wonderful, and so do I. I love Canada,'' Trump said during one of his now-familiar photo ops.

''But they've outsmarted our politicians for many years."

Trump also used Twitter, his preferred platform, to reprise his recent threats about Canada's dairy industry.

"Canada has made business for our dairy farmers in Wisconsin and other border states very difficult," he tweeted. "We will not stand for this. Watch!"

Then later, of Canada's recent adjustments to dairy regulations, he said: ''We're not gonna put up with it."

Some members of the Canadian government suspect this is all a negotiating ploy in the runup to NAFTA talks. Days ago, one official predicted this would prove to be a shock-and-awe negotiating tactic, symptomatic of Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross's style.

Right on cue, Ross strode to the White House podium Tuesday to make it clear: all these issues were, indeed, related to NAFTA. He said all these irritants prove the agreement could be improved.

"Everything relates to everything else when you're trying to negotiate," Ross told a press briefing at the White House, referring to dairy and lumber.

But Ross insisted the current spout of maple-flavoured indignation is indeed spontaneous.

He said the president was deeply moved during a visit to Wisconsin last week. He said Trump met women who were distraught over the potential loss of their dairy farms. They blamed Canada's recent adjustment to internal regulations, which limited demand for imports.

Trump took up their cause.

It's a cause also backed by his chief of staff, from the cheese-producing state of Wisconsin; the Republican leader of the House, also from Wisconsin; and the Democratic leader in the Senate, from the dairy-producing state of New York.

Several former American diplomats urged the Canadian government to stay cool. That included two former ambassadors to Canada, Bruce Heyman and Jim Blanchard, speaking at a conference in Detroit.

The sentiment was echoed by a former diplomat who leads a Canadian-American business group.

Maryscott Greenwood said the Canadian government has been doing the right things, and shouldn't get distracted. She said the sudden glare on Canada is probably an accident of happenstance — Trump was in Wisconsin, a softwood decision was due, and it's all happening with NAFTA negotiations set to start.

"I don't think there is a grand strategy unfolding with respect to Canada on this side of the border,'' Greenwood said.

"(My advice to Canada is): Continue the robust engagement, inside and outside D.C. Don't take your foot off the gas ... Resist the urge to engage in gutter politics, protectionist tendencies, or to counter-punch — even if it might feel good to do so."

Later Tuesday, the prime minister and president spoke by phone.

While they discussed the dairy and lumber irritants, the White House said: ''It was a very amicable call.''

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