
Fear and uncertainty for Ontario autoworkers after Trump announces 25% tariff
CBC
On a day when U.S. President Donald Trump took aim at the vehicle manufacturing industry, Ontario autoworkers said it's the latest wave in what's been a storm of uncertainty and more proof the Canadian industry needs government support.
Late Wednesday, Trump said he'd signed an executive order that will impose a 25 per cent import tariff on vehicles not made in the United States. Although the full implications of the tariff weren't immediately clear, he said the levy will kick in on April 2 and suggested it could start at a base rate of 2.5 per cent.
Trump's statement came the same day Canadian Liberal Leader Mark Carney was in Windsor, Ont., one of the front lines of the tariff war, where he promised $2 billion in new supports for the domestic auto industry while campaigning for the April 28 federal election. NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh called Trump's latest action a "full frontal attack on autoworkers." Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has said tariffs are impacting workers on both sides of the border.
Trump's political parrying has dealt another blow to an auto industry that's had more than its share of ups, downs and shutdowns in recent years.
For Ontario autoworkers at GM's CAMI Assembly plant in Ingersoll, and others in the industry, the help can't come soon enough.
"There's a lot of uncertainty, and that creates a lot of fear," said Bonita McCarthy, a CAMI plant employee since 2011 who now trains workers as a Unifor union rep.
The plant retooled in 2022 so that it could start producing the new BrightDrop electric delivery vehicle.
While the move to the BrightDrop has kept the plant running, there have been occasional shutdowns for reasons including parts shortages and other supply chain issues.
"We haven't worked a full year since COVID," said McCarthy.
Kim Dionne, a former GM plant employee who now works with Unifor, is also frustrated by the U.S. move to impose tariffs, saying they'll inflict damage on both sides of the border.
"The U.S. president ... he's made it clear he doesn't want a Canadian auto industry, but we've been building cars in Canada for over 100 years," she said. "These are our jobs."
Dionne pointed out that vehicles and parts cross the border frequently as they go through various stages of assembly, and travel along a complex and integrated network that's taken years to build.
She sees U.S. autoworkers as her colleagues, not as competitors.
"I feel like we work together," she said. "We're all employed by GM. It's not like [Trump] can say, 'We're going to tariff the crap out of the Canadian auto industry' and they're going to open up shop [in the U.S.] tomorrow. That's not going to happen. By the time those U.S. plants are ready for people to work in them, Trump is going to be out of office."

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's response to a U.S. podcaster's quips about Canada as the 51st state last week was to tell him and a conservative group's Florida donor gala that they'd regret having tens of millions of progressive Canadians voting for the U.S. president, according to video of her speaking event obtained by CBC News.