Canada Begins Making Key Border Changes After Trudeau’s Meeting with Trump

The⁤ text discusses President-elect ​Donald Trump’s triumphant negotiation ⁤strategies with⁢ foreign leaders, specifically Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Claudia ⁤Sheinbaum, ⁤in the​ context ‍of improving border security and⁣ trade policies. Within weeks of his election, ‍Trump‍ leveraged‍ tariff threats to extract concessions, a tactic ⁣that contrasts with President⁢ Joe Biden’s approach ⁢over nearly⁢ four years, which is characterized as ​neglectful of American interests. Canadian officials, including ⁣Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc, acknowledged the need for more robust border​ measures following‌ discussions with Trump.

The​ piece highlights historical perspectives on tariffs, referencing founding figures like‍ Thomas Jefferson and ⁢James Madison, who viewed tariffs as essential​ for statecraft and‍ economic stability.⁢ By invoking these ​strategies, Trump is portrayed as returning to a principled form​ of American negotiation that prioritizes national interests. Senator​ Ted Cruz supports this narrative, suggesting that Trump’s threats have already ⁣prompted ‍action⁢ from foreign leaders,‍ showcasing a position of strength. The text ‍ultimately argues that⁢ trump’s ​methods mark a stark contrast to the Democrats’ perceived⁣ inaction on ⁢border issues, ⁤asserting that he ⁤has successfully prioritized American needs through effective​ diplomacy and‍ negotiation.


President-elect Donald Trump has achieved in less than four weeks what President Joe Biden never even tried in nearly four years.

Trump did this, in fact, simply by negotiating on behalf of Americans, whose interests Biden and the Democrats routinely ignore.

According to Axios, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau emerged from a meeting with Trump this weekend at the president-elect’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida, determined to improve border security in what one Canadian official described as “a visible and muscular way.”

That comment came from Canadian Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc. On Sunday, LeBlanc told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that he and Trudeau had spoken with Trump and Commerce Secretary nominee Howard Lutnick “about tariffs and what they would mean to the economy.”

In other words, Trump’s very public use of tariff threats as a negotiating tactic seems to have paid dividends.

“There’s already hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars spent, but we’re going to take additional measures,” LeBlanc said.

In the nation’s early years, Republicans such as Thomas Jefferson and James Madison touted tariffs for revenue and statecraft purposes.

No self-respecting revolutionary, of course, dared to propose an income tax. Thus, tariffs effectively funded the entire federal government, a comparatively minuscule enterprise in those days.

But Jefferson and Madison also regarded tariffs as an indispensable tool when dealing with foreign governments. The Founders embraced free trade in principle, as liberty-loving people do, but they also demanded reciprocity.

By using tariffs to extract concessions from foreign leaders, therefore, Trump has harkened back to the republic’s halcyon days.

“You look at the threat of tariffs against Mexico and Canada, [which] immediately has produced action,” Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas said in a clip posted to the social media platform X. The senator made those comments Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

Cruz, in fact, repeatedly used the word “leverage” to describe Trump’s use of tariff threats.

Moreover, by forcing foreign leaders to negotiate for access to America’s enormous market, Trump acted from a position of strength.

“Thanks for dinner last night, President Trump. I look forward to the work we can do together, again,” Trudeau posted Saturday.

Of course, by making the trip to Mar-a-Lago in the first place, the prime minister acknowledged his comparative weakness.

“I look forward to groveling for your mercy,” the parody account “Justin Trudeau’s Ego” posted on Saturday.

Meanwhile, Trump has also announced border-related concessions from Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, though Sheinbaum quickly responded with an apparently face-saving post on X that allowed her to maintain her liberal open-borders bona fides without contradicting the substance of Trump’s announcement.

In sum, as Cruz rightly indicated, “Joe Biden and the Democrats wanted this invasion to happen” on the southern border. Thus, they had no intention of negotiating for Americans’ interests.

Trump, on the other hand, successfully chastened two liberal world leaders by channeling his inner Jeffersonian Republican, using tariffs as a legitimate tool of statecraft and thereby putting Americans first.




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