Canada hit back at the United States on Friday with retaliatory tariffs on $12.6 billion in American goods, including summer barbecue essentials such as orange juice, ketchup and bourbon.
The 25 per cent tariffs on steel products and 10 per cent on aluminum and consumer goods take effect on July 1 in the opening salvo in a trade war with President Donald Trump.
Ottawa also announced 2 billion Canadian dollars ($1.5 billion) in aid for Canadian steel and aluminum industries and workers hurt by US metals tariffs announced in March and imposed on Canada on June 1.
Trump initially exempted key suppliers and allies like Canada from the 25 per cent duties on steel imports and 10 per cent on aluminum.
"Canada has to choice but to retaliate with a measured, reciprocal dollar-for-dollar response. That is what we are doing," said Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland, making the announcement at a steel plant in Hamilton, Ontario flanked by brawny workers in yellow hardhats.
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"We will not escalate and we will not back down," she added, while urging Washington to reconsider its attack on the Canadian economy, and noting that the response was Ottawa's toughest trade action since World War II.
The list of some 250 US goods subject to the Canadian duties aim to apply maximum pressure on Trump supporters in swing states in upcoming US midterm elections in November.
The tariff targets include Florida orange juice, Wisconsin toilet paper, North Carolina gherkins, which are labour intensive to produce.