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Calgary, Alberta – Calgary’s Oil Club is exactly what you expect. A sturdy wealthy man in dark wooden walls, fine decorations, and perhaps a tieless jacket that I can buy the whole town of West Virginia where I live. This is where I meet Gary Ma, a businessman and former government official, to see how President Donald Trump’s tariffs are affecting Canadian politics.
In March, he served as the United States Minister of Alberta from 2007 to 2011, but is still working in national politics.
Mark Carney wins a liberal nomination to replace Trudeau as Canada’s next prime minister
This week, the liberals who chose Mark Carney as their new leader wanted to know what the liberals experienced since President Trump began launching tariffs, and how Conservative leader Pierre Polyeayer could respond as Canadian elections heat up.
“There are two issues with voting,” Mar said. “First, who can deal with President Trump most, and who can run the economy next?” Clearly, the tariff situation, or as Canada calls it, the trade war colours both of these issues.
Columnist David Marcus tells Canadians how US tariffs are affecting politics. (Fox News Digital)
March offered four possibilities, saying it was to “understand Trump’s tariff motives.” It increases US manufacturing, generates tax cut revenue, balances trade deficits, and creates leverage for non-trade issues. In this case, you will cross the Canadian border.
As a former diplomat, Gary felt the fourth use of tariffs was most unfavorable, but what he was really asking was what Trump wants and needs from Canada to make this halt? If there is no answer to this question, Poirierbre is in a dangerous situation.
He has been seen alongside Trump in Canada since Conservative leaders provided support for the anti-vaxine Mandat truck driver protests in Ottawa in 2022. But today, Trump is number one in the public foe, and the Polyavel party blew 20 points in the vote in two months.
Carney and the liberals have already been advertised with Canadian airwaves linking Poilliebre to the US president.
I asked if Polyavel would be better politically today if Trump would praise or insult him. “It would be better for Trump to humiliate him,” he didn’t hesitate.

Several women in Calgary had protested the Liberal Party’s support for men identified as women providing time in women’s prisons. However, such issues have been killed by the customs situation. (Fox News Digital)
For some reason, this conservative leader and prime minister must find a way to become a frenzy with Trump to show that he can work with Trump, like his younger brother who doesn’t take away the gaff from him, while also defending Canada’s honor that threatens the sovereignty of his proud nation.
This is because everyone in Calgary, including MAR, said that Canadian nationalism was almost anachronistic until recently, and at a level they have never seen before. Trump’s constant trolling about making Canada a “51st state” is undoubtedly another factor.
The election will be held in April at the forefront. If the tariff issues were resolved quickly, it released Poilievre up to a campaign on issues he wanted to focus on, and I accidentally ran one of them in Calgary on Sunday.
When I turned the corner in the morning constitution, I saw about 40 or 50 mostly women. So I spoke to Heather Mason. Heather Mason was jailed when a policy was introduced to allow men.
Mason and every other woman there had a clear message that “it has to be stopped.” Poilierbre agrees and publicly says he will ban men from women’s prisons.
These are the kind of issues that Canadian conservatives want to focus on, like their cousins in the South. But they can’t because tariffs suck all news oxygen from the media.
Certainly, Trump’s job is not to win conservative elections in Canada, but to do what he does in the best interests of Americans. But certainly, at one level, American interest is tied to a good functional relationship with the closest trading partner to the North.
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The decision to give up on Great White North means that liberals want a new election as soon as possible. They feel they have a mojo, so the sooner the better. Political they want this trade war.
“There are two things that increase Canadian nationalism, war and sports. We both mentioned the ‘trade war’ and the revival of Canadian hockey rivalry.
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In such an environment, Poilierble may need to return to Trump, but in a friendly way, in a sibling’s way. But it’s a very nice line to walk in. How he manages that challenge can define Canadian relations for a very long time from now on.
For more information about David Marcus, click here