President Donald Trump hoped that Canadians will return to the United States once a trade deal is finalised.
Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office on Tuesday while meeting Prime Minister Mark Carney, Trump acknowledged why many Canadians are currently avoiding visits.
Trump’s repeated suggestion that Canada could become the 51st U.S. state to bypass tariffs has sparked anger among Canadians, contributing to a 23% drop in visits during the first seven months of 2025 compared with the same period in 2024, according to Canada’s national statistical office.
“I understand that. Look, I understand that,” Trump said, before forecasting that Canada and the U.S. would eventually reach an agreement.
“It’s something that will get worked out. There’s still great love between the two countries but you know American people want product here, they want to make it here,” he added. “We are competing for the same business. That’s the problem. That’s why I keep mentioning one way to solve that problem. There’s a very easy way.”
Trump has frequently suggested that Canada could avoid tariffs by joining the United States as its 51st state. However, these remarks have alienated Canadian travellers and heightened tensions in bilateral trade relations.
“The people of Canada, they will love us again,” Trump said. “Most of them still do. If you say only 25%. I assume a lot of them. I think they love us.”
“It’s not bad. They’ll come back,” Carney told Trump.
Carney made his second visit to the Oval Office ahead of next year’s review of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement and as one of the world’s most durable and amicable alliances has been fractured by Trump’s trade war and annexation threats.
Trump said he was open to extending the free trade agreement with Mexico and Canada through a renegotiation or seeking “different deals.”
The free trade agreement was enacted during Trump’s first term, and it allows the majority of Canadian and Mexican goods to be shipped to the U.S. without tariffs. But Trump has made it clear since returning to office that he wants to reshape the relationship, and he expressed ambivalence over the process as long as he feels like he’s able to improve America’s position.
“We could renegotiate it, and that would be good, or we can just do different deals,” he said. “We’re allowed to do different deals if we want. We might make deals that are better for the individual countries.”
Carney entered the visit hoping to find some relief on sector-specific tariffs. Trump has some sector-specific tariffs on Canada, known as Section 232 tariffs, that are having an impact. There are 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, for example.
After the meeting, Dominic LeBlanc, the minister responsible for Canada-U.S. trade, described the talks as “successful” and “positive” on trade issues, though he noted the conversation would continue. He said Canada was looking to get a deal done quickly on steel and aluminum.
There is fear in Canada over what will happen to the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which is critical to Canada’s economy. More than three-quarters of Canada’s exports go to the U.S.
Trump showed a fondness for Carney — something he didn't have toward Carney's predecessor, Justin Trudeau — but noted there was a “natural conflict” between the two countries, a point to which the prime minister politely disagreed.
“We want Canada to do great,” Trump said. “But you know, there’s a point at which we also want the same business.”
Asked why the U.S. and Canada had failed to reach a deal on trade, Trump said it’s a complicated situation.
“We have natural conflict,” he said. “We also have mutual love.”
Carney said he wouldn't use the word “conflict.”
“There are areas where we compete, and it’s in those areas where we have to come to an agreement that works. But there are more areas where we are stronger together, and that’s what we’re focused on.”
The U.S. president made a joking reference to a “merger” between the two countries at the top of his remarks Tuesday.
Relations with Canada’s southern neighbor and longtime ally are at a low point.
“We've had ups and downs, but this is the lowest point in relations that I can recall,” said Frank McKenna, a former Canadian ambassador to the United States.
“I talk every day to ordinary citizens who are changing their vacation plans, and I talk to large business owners who are moving reward trips away or executive business trips,” McKenna said. “There is an outright rebellion.”
(With Inputs from AP)
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