π¨π¦ππ§π Canada Must Act to Protect Workers and Jobs During Trump Era
Friday, 24 January 2025 08:00.AM
Unifor warns that Canada must act to protect workers and Canadian jobs amid the continued threat of U.S. tariffs in the Trump era.
"The looming tariff threat serves as a real wake up call on the need to mitigate the risk to Canadian workers," said Unifor National President Lana Payne.
President Trump indicated that he may move ahead with a 25 per cent across-the-board tariff on Canadian goods as soon as February 1, 2025.
"The reality is that Trump could impose punishing tariffs at any time while continuing to make demands for concessions from Canada. This intentional strategy of constant chaos and the mere threat of tariffs is damaging to jobs, investment and our economy," said Payne. "Canada has to do a number of things to make sure that it's prepared to respond to that threat on February 1 or at any time during Trump's presidency. We must initiate policies to shore up worker protections and industries."
Payne, appointed to the Prime Minister's Council on Canada-U.S. Relations and a member of the industry-led Canada U.S. Trade Council, joined Canadian stakeholders at the Canadian Embassy in Washington D.C. on inauguration day to advocate for Canadian workers.
Unifor outlined pre-emptive actions in a letter to Prime Minister Trudeau, including enhanced income supports for workers to prepare for a potential rise in unemployment with improved access to Employment Insurance benefits and other special income assistance programs. Better management of strategic national resources through industrial policy and the establishment of reciprocal procurement policies for U.S. suppliers with leveraging of public purchasing for industrial development.
In the event of U.S. tariffs, the union recommends targeted and strategic tariff retaliation and emergency relief programs to mitigate risk of layoff and sustain companies in their operations.
"Unifor has been clear that a 25% tariff would be devastating to both Canadian and American workers," added Payne. "We cannot afford to let down our guard and taking proactive measures to protect Canadian jobs just makes sense."
Unifor is Canada's largest union in the private sector, representing 320,000 workers in every major area of the economy. The union advocates for all working people and their rights, fights for equality and social justice in Canada and abroad, and strives to create progressive change for a better future.
SOURCE: Unifor
-
Related materials:
- 24-Jan-2025 12:00 PM βοΈπ΅π§π Grey Matter Neurosciences Secures License for World-Leading Focused Ultrasound Technology from Sunnybrook Research Institute, Announces $14 Million Financing to Advance Treatment for Alzheimer's Disease
- 14-Jan-2025 10:21 AM ONTARIO π΅π€ππΌ Ontario Helping More Women Build Skills and Get Jobs π·ββοΈ
- 10-Jan-2025 02:24 PM ONTARIO π€π Ontario Adds 23,000 Jobs in December
- 06-Dec-2024 02:35 PM π»π±π₯οΈπ΅ Canada to Drive Billions in Investments to Build Domestic AI Compute Capacity at Home πΌπ
- 06-Dec-2024 08:00 AM π§π 42% of IT Professionals Are Exploring New Jobs: IT Talent Trends 2025 Report From Info-Tech Research Group Spotlights Retention Risks and Opportunities πΌπ
- 05-Dec-2024 10:23 AM π»π±π₯οΈ Quantum Computing Boom: $1 Trillion in Value Creation Forecasted by 2035
- 03-Dec-2024 10:37 PM π»π±π₯οΈ Cracking the Code: The Quantum Computing Boom and Its $1 Trillion Economic Impact
- 20-Nov-2024 12:00 PM π§π New WXN Report Reveals the Hard Truth About Gender Gaps--and the High Costs of Stagnation in Leadership π©
- 18-Nov-2024 12:00 PM π§π Youth Unemployment to Cost Canadian Economy $18.5 Billion by 2034, Warns New Report π΅
- 15-Nov-2024 02:33 PM π§π Centennial College Amps Up Electric Vehicle Training π