'Shawn Fain is wrong': Canadian Labour Congress blasts UAW leader on tariffs
CBC
The head of Canada's largest labor organization on Monday was blunt in her assessment of a powerful union leader south of the border over his support of U.S. President Donald Trump's auto tariffs.
Bea Bruske, president of the Canadian Labour Congress, said United Auto Workers president Shawn Fain is "100 per cent" wrong in his support of Trump's 25 per cent levies on auto imports.
"Shawn Fain is wrong," Bruske said at a news conference in Windsor on Monday morning. "He's absolutely wrong."
Bruske's comments illustrate the sharp divide on tariffs between union leaders in Canada and the U.S., who share decades of history and have more commonly worked in solidarity. They also come as Fain continues to defend his decision to back Trump's trade war, arguing that tariffs will force manufacturing companies to move jobs to the U.S.
But industry experts and Canadian union leaders have repeatedly warned that tariffs on Canada and Mexico could destabilize – and even destroy – the North American auto sector, which is built upon a deeply integrated supply chain.
"We already know that five different U.S. plants have layoffs today because of the imposition of tariffs and because of how integrated our economy is," Bruske said, the busy Ambassador Bridge connecting Windsor and Detroit in the background.
"So whatever [Fain]'s trying to achieve in terms of getting more manufacturing back to the U.S., this is already impacting UAW members on the southern side of the border as well," she said.
Stellantis, which builds the Pacifica minivans in Windsor, announced last week that it would pause production at the plant for two weeks as a result of Trump's tariffs, which took effect Thursday.
The company has also paused production at one of its factories in Mexico. Those closures have led to temporary layoffs at five plants in Michigan and Indiana.
Bruske and other union leaders said they were in Windsor on Monday to show solidarity with autoworkers and demand more support for those facing layoffs.
The CLC wants to see Canada's employment insurance system expanded and public procurement to support unionized workplaces, among other things. Bruske also called on financial institutions to protect workers from losing their homes or cars.
"When workers face layoffs, we are calling on banks and lenders to step up and support workers," Bruske said. "And that means at this critical time, no foreclosures, no repossessions, not now, not while workers in this country are under attack."
Her comments about Fain came after she stepped in to answer a reporter's question for a Canadian UAW member who attended the press conference.

B.C. Premier David Eby is defending the provincial government's approval to continue construction on a new pipeline project that will supply natural gas to a proposed floating liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal north of Prince Rupert, saying his government would not turn away investment in the province.