What’s less clear is what Trump wants in exchange for dropping tariff threat: sources
Donald Trump left his Canadian guests at Mar-a-Lago with a clear impression that fentanyl is his top priority for now in the Canada-U.S. relationship, according to Canadian officials familiar with the details of Friday’s surprise dinner with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
The incoming U.S. president gave the sense he wants to declare he’s already saved American lives even before taking office on Jan. 20, 2025, said two sources whom CBC News agreed not to identify.
The intensity of the focus on fentanyl caught some of the Canadians at the dinner by surprise, the sources said, as the Canadian side had previously assumed Trump was focused more on human migration than on opioids at the border.
What’s still not clear, the sources said, is what specifically Trump wants from Canada in exchange for removing his threat of a debilitating 25 per cent tariff on all Canadian goods coming into the United States.
When Trump issued his threat on Monday, he said in a social media post that this tariff will remain in effect until his country stops being flooded with undocumented migrants and drugs, especially fentanyl.
Does Trump want more patrols at the border, more police crackdowns on drug labs, or tougher laws to fight money laundering and organized crime? That’s not yet clear, both sources said. There were no such specifics from Trump at the dinner.
Trudeau flew to Florida with Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc and his chief of staff, Katie Telford.
LeBlanc said the Canadians told Trump’s team they’re going to look at procuring “for example, additional drones [and] additional police helicopters. We’re going to redeploy personnel.”
“We talked about the challenge that fentanyl represents in Canada, and these are shared objectives,” LeBlanc said on Rosemary Barton Live on Sunday.
The sources said the dinner was intended primarily as a social event. The plans came together unbeknown to almost anyone in the federal government during a series of interactions between Trudeau and Trump.
The few who were aware of it were instructed to keep quiet until Trudeau was already in Florida.
Trudeau’s plan, the sources said, was to set a positive tone with a good meeting, share some personal interactions, get to know people on Trump’s team and not spoil this dinner encounter with a hard sell on tariffs.
One source said the event concluded with Trump personally walking Trudeau toward the exit of his Mar-a-Lago estate after a pleasant evening.
When asked if Trump likes the prime minister, LeBlanc said, “Very much so.”
“I saw very much the mutual respect and warmth between the two leaders,” he said. “I thought it was very positive.”
The takeaway from Trudeau’s trip to Mar-a-Lago: For Trump, fentanyl is priority No. 1 | CBC News