Prime Minister Mark Carney at the Liberal Convention on April 12, 2026. | X
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The United States does not get to dictate the terms of upcoming trade talks, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday, when asked about reports that Washington wanted an “entry fee” before starting negotiations.

The United States and Canada are set to hold talks on revising a North American free trade agreement, a pact President Donald Trump signed and praised during his first term but now dismisses as “irrelevant.”

Quoting multiple Canadian sources, the CBC reported Wednesday that Trump’s team wants an “entry fee,” or concessions, from Canada before starting talks on revising the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA).

Prominent Canadian politician and former Quebec premier Jean Charest, now a member of Carney’s advisory council on U.S. trade, told French public broadcaster Radio-Canada that Trump is demanding “concessions before we sit down at the table.”

Asked about those reports in Ottawa, and whether Canada should offer concessions in order to persuade the U.S. to talk, Carney said “no.”

“It’s not a case of the U.S. dictating the terms … It’s not a case of [one country] demanding and the other begging,” he said in French. “It’s a negotiation.”

The offices of U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer did not immediately reply to requests for comment on the CBC’s report.

Since taking office just over one year ago, Carney has maintained a defiant tone in response to Trump’s threats, insisting Canada will not buckle when faced with unreasonable trade demands.

He has also said Canada needs to dramatically reduce its economic and security reliance on the United States.

In an address to the nation on Sunday, he said: “Many of our former strengths based on our close ties to America have become our weaknesses, weaknesses that we must correct.”

Trump has imposed punishing tariffs on key Canadian sectors but has so far adhered to most of the CUSMA, meaning more than 85 per cent of U.S.-Canada trade has remained tariff-free.

His administration has said it wants major changes to the CUSMA in revision talks said to intensify after July 1.

Trump’s auto and steel tariffs have hit particularly hard in Ontario, where Premier Doug Ford has retaliated by blocking the sale of all U.S. liquor and wine.

Lutnick called that ban “outrageous” in congressional testimony on Wednesday.

But Ford has said he will not waver until all U.S. tariffs are removed.

“I don’t trust President Trump,” Ford said Wednesday.

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