Trump admin silent after Hajdu pushes back on U.S. plan to raid Canada’s drug cabinet
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Canada’s decision to block American imports of certain prescription drugs from north of the border is getting stony silence from the Trump administration — a sign, one expert says, that the U.S. proposal is “dead in the water.”
The measure, first floated by Donald Trump a year ago as a strategy to help reduce America’s staggering drug costs, took effect Monday after the president signed a pre-election executive order in September.
On Saturday, however, Health Minister Patty Hajdu parried the effort with just days to spare, prohibiting bulk drug exports if they pose a risk of creating or worsening drug shortages in the Canadian market.
The White House referred questions about the new limits to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which has yet to respond to repeated media queries about where Canada’s move leaves Trump’s plan.

