‘I hope … you’re looking carefully at the labels to support Canadian jobs,’ when shopping, David Eby said.
British Columbians should rethink trips to the United States and purchases of American products, as the province establishes a task force to respond to U.S. President Donald Trump’s threatened tariffs, Premier David Eby says.
Trump’s proposed 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian exports would be a “deliberate economic attack” on B.C. families and people should think carefully about spending money in a country that wants to do them economic harm, Eby said during a news conference in Vancouver on Tuesday.
Metal cranes and piles of containers at the busy Port of Vancouver could be seen in the background as he spoke at the Vancouver cabinet offices.
“It feels very strange to say, but I really do think that for Canadians right now, when you’re planning your March break vacations, when you’re planning your summer vacations, if the tariff threat is realized, the deliberate economic attack on families in our province, in our country, by the president of the United States, that we really should think carefully about spending our money in that country,” Eby said.
He also urged residents to read the labels of products they buy to make sure they are supporting Canadian-made goods.
“I hope for British Columbians at home, when you’re at the grocery store and you have a chance to buy a product, right now you’re looking carefully at the labels to support Canadian jobs and to support Canada at this critical time,” he said.
The premier said the task force includes representatives from the business, Indigenous and labour communities to co-ordinate the provincial response to the tariff threat.
The task force will be co-chaired by Tamara Vrooman, CEO of the Vancouver International Airport President, Jonathan Price, CEO of Teck, and Bridgitte Anderson, CEO of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade.
The B.C. government supports the federal government’s plan to establish retaliatory tariffs on Republican states if the U.S. tariffs dispute, Eby said.
“For retaliatory measures, for the province of British Columbia, everything is on the table,” Eby said.
On the day of the U.S. president’s inauguration Monday, Trump said he wanted 25 per cent tariffs imposed on Canada and Mexico by Feb. 1, although his executive order calling for an investigation of trade says its report is not due until April 1.