B.C. assembles ‘war room’ as U.S. tariff threat looms on Saturday
VANCOUVER — The relationship between the U.S. and Canada has “fundamentally changed,” regardless of whether U.S. President Donald Trump’s promised tariffs on Canadian goods materialize on Saturday, according to the chair of a new B.C. cabinet “war room” to tackle the threat.
Ravi Kahlon, who is also British Columbia’s housing minister, said the provincial government would work to diversify the province’s economy and reduce its reliance on the United States.
“We cannot live four years with threats constantly coming from a Trump administration,” Kahlon told reporters in Vancouver, shortly after Premier David Eby announced he had assembled a cabinet committee to counter the tariff threat.
Committee chair Kahlon said Eby directed his ministers to take action ranging from diversifying trading partners and strengthening ties across the Pacific, to producing more of B.C.’s food locally.


