BC Premier David AB said on Tuesday that the U.S. President Donald Trump’s U.S. Action against all Canadian goods exported in the export of 25 per cent
ABA said that with the immediate pull of red state liquor from the government store shelves, the province would prefer BC and Canadian products for infrastructure projects and support the hard industries through tariffs.
“You want to send a message to the United States that you have pain on what you are doing,” Professor of the University of Economics told Werner Antviller Global News.
“And we want to bring that pain to you because you hurt us.”
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Officials are warning that tariffs, with 25 percent revenge on Canada’s around 1,300 US goods, means that things like peanut butter, coffee and orange juice in the United States can be more expensive immediately.
“Under the road you will see that cloth and other customer goods,” Antviller said.
“Similarly below the path of bulker, more expensive goods, such as devices and industriial dysfunction.”

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BC’s Sal Lmon Farming Industry said that most of the farm Sal Lmon U.S. Goes to customers.
The stakeholders said in a statement that tariffs could reduce demand by 40 percent and spend about 1,200 jobs.
In front of the budget on Tuesday, AB called for unity, asking the British Columbians to buy local whenever possible.
He also said that if anyone had a choice to travel, he asked them not to spend vacation money on the south of the border.
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