Canadian, U.S. mayors from Great Lakes area call for trade stability
WASHINGTON — Canadian and United States mayors from the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence region are calling for economic stability and an end to the threat of across-the-board tariffs, saying that millions of livelihoods are at stake on both sides of the border.
Hamilton, Ont., Mayor Andrea Horwath told reporters in Washington, D.C., on Friday that the region forms a single economy that is so integrated the products they produce can’t be described as purely Canadian or American.
“We have one integrated Great Lakes economy,” she said. “In fact, 59 per cent of American imports coming in from Canada are either raw materials or other products that are not yet finished and are being exported to the United States for final assembly, often before being sent right back to Canada to their final customers, their final consumers.”
The mayors were in Washington for the annual gathering of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative, a group of municipal and Indigenous government leaders who represent the region.


