Business
Trump delays 50% EU tariffs after Brussels begs for more time

MxM News
Quick Hit:
President Donald Trump announced Sunday that he is postponing sweeping new tariffs on the European Union after a direct appeal from EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
Key Details:
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Trump had previously warned the EU it would face 50% tariffs by June 1st, calling the bloc “very difficult to deal with” and pressing for a deal.
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On Truth Social, Trump confirmed he had “received a call today from Ursula von der Leyen…requesting an extension,” which he granted until July 9th.
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Von der Leyen said the EU was ready to move “swiftly and decisively,” framing the talks as vital to preserving the “most consequential and close trade relationship” in the world.
Diving Deeper:
President Donald Trump on Sunday evening confirmed he has delayed the implementation of 50% tariffs on the European Union, following a direct request from European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen for more time to negotiate a trade agreement. The extension comes after Trump sharply criticized the EU for being “very difficult to deal with,” warning that steep tariffs would take effect by June 1st if Brussels failed to come to the table.
In a message posted on Truth Social, the president stated: “I received a call today from Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, requesting an extension on the June 1st deadline on the 50% Tariff with respect to Trade and the European Union. I agreed to the extension—July 9, 2025—It was my privilege to do so. The Commission President said that talks will begin rapidly.”
Von der Leyen echoed that sentiment in a post on X, calling it a “good call” with the president and affirming that “Europe is ready to advance talks swiftly and decisively.” She added, “To reach a good deal, we would need the time until July 9.”
The EU is already contending with a 10% blanket tariff and additional 25% duties on key exports like aluminum, automobiles, and steel. While countries such as the United Kingdom have reached bilateral deals with the Trump administration, Brussels has maintained a more rigid stance, citing the complexity of representing the varied interests of its 27 member states.
Trump has consistently criticized the European Union as a protectionist bloc designed to disadvantage the United States. In remarks earlier this year, he argued the EU “was formed to screw the U.S.,” referencing its origins in the European Coal and Steel Community, which aimed to create internal free trade while restricting third-country access—particularly from the U.S.
Trade negotiations are expected to center not only on reducing European tariffs and barriers against American goods but also on urging the EU to scale back its economic ties to Communist China. While the U.S. remained the EU’s largest trading partner in 2024, accounting for 17% of total trade, China closely followed at 15%. However, the EU imported significantly more goods from China—€520 billion—compared to €335 billion from the U.S.
With tariffs now delayed until July 9th, all eyes turn to whether the EU is serious about making meaningful concessions—or if Trump’s deadline extension will be the final one.
Business
Canadians Will Pay For The Federal Budget Delay

From the Frontier Centre for Public Policy
In his latest commentary, Lee Harding slams the Carney government for skipping the federal budget while plowing ahead with tax cuts and spending sprees. With no clear plan and ballooning deficits, Canadians wonder how these promises will be paid for—hint: more debt. Harding warns that Ottawa’s “figure it out later” approach is reckless, echoing past fiscal blunders that still haunt taxpayers today. Brace yourselves—this bill is coming.
The Carney government skipped the budget, but not the spending. And you’re on the hook
What’s better?
To spend and save without a plan, or to do so with accurate information and a focused strategy? The federal government has chosen the former, and one thing is certain: Canadians are going to pay.
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne announced on May 14 that the newly elected Carney government wouldn’t table a spring budget, opting instead to take things “step-by-step.” Parliament will sit until June 20, but aside from the throne speech, the only stated priority is to lower the first income tax bracket from 15 per cent to 14. That would slightly lower federal income taxes for most working Canadians by reducing the rate on the first $55,000 of income, saving up to about $550 a year.
That sounds good—until you ask how it’s being paid for. Without a budget, Canadians have no clear picture of the trade-offs or long-term costs.
Tabling a budget is the government’s formal presentation of its financial plan to Parliament. It outlines spending priorities, revenue forecasts and deficit projections for the year ahead. Skipping this step is no small matter.
“Cut taxes first, figure out how to pay later” isn’t the worst way to roll the dice, but it is far from the best. And we already know how Ottawa will cover the shortfall: more deficit spending. Canada hasn’t seen a balanced federal budget in nearly 20 years, and there’s no sign of one on the horizon.
Canadians will repay this tax cut with interest, sacrificing tomorrow’s services for today’s soundbites. This approach lacks fiscal prudence; doing it without a budget only compounds the recklessness.
Ottawa rarely fails to table a budget. The last time was during the height of the COVID pandemic in 2020. The results were disastrous: public debt surged and remains with us today. That was an unprecedented global crisis. There is no such emergency in 2025—only political calculation.
Carney claimed during the election campaign that proposed U.S. tariffs placed Canadians in “the greatest crisis of our lifetimes.” Yet, days later, he stood alongside U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House, smiling for photos and flashing a thumbs-up. For perspective, imagine Volodymyr Zelenskyy flying to Moscow to do the same with Vladimir Putin.
Some may argue the spring election left too little time before summer to draft a budget. But that doesn’t hold water. The Harper Conservatives won a majority on May 2, 2011, and still tabled a budget that spring. Carney’s cabinet includes many Trudeau-era veterans, and the Department of Finance remains staffed by experienced civil servants. The Liberals can and should produce a budget.
Parliament has even sat in July to pass urgent legislation. In 2020, MPs returned on July 20 to approve the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy. In 1988, they stayed until July 7 to pass the Canada–U.S. Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act. There is precedent—and there is time.
Even when the Liberals do present budgets, they’ve only deepened Canada’s fiscal hole. On Dec. 31, 2015, the net federal debt stood at $693.8 billion. By the end of 2024, it had climbed to $953.9 billion—an increase of 37.4 per cent in just nine years. These debts will likely never be repaid.
A 2022 Fraser Institute study estimated that a 16-year-old Canadian will pay $29,663 in income taxes over her lifetime just to cover interest on the federal debt—money that won’t fund services but simply keep creditors happy.
The Liberals’ current platform is thin on discipline. It includes income tax cuts worth $4.2 billion and a GST exemption on first-time home purchases, costing $383 million. But these are overshadowed by broader spending.
Last year’s budget outlined $538 billion in spending, with $40 billion funded through borrowing. By fall, that deficit had grown past $60 billion. This year’s platform will make matters worse by $46.8 billion, even after factoring in $20 billion in retaliatory tariff revenues.
If the government struggles to follow its own budget when it sets one, how much damage might it do without one? Plenty.
Parliament must still approve any new spending through supplementary estimates—requests for additional funds beyond what’s already authorized. But without the context of a full budget, MPs will be asked to approve billions in spending without a clear picture of what’s affordable.
What would be refreshing, though unlikely, is for non-Liberal MPs to approve only measures that strengthen the Canadian economy, military and policing. They could reject everything else and argue that responsible spending can’t occur without a formal financial plan.
Governments should manage national finances like a responsible household: with a clear budget and the discipline to live within their means. Unfortunately, the Carney government appears unwilling—or unable—to do either.
Lee Harding is a research fellow with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.
Business
Federal government’s ‘very different approach’ will further erode Ottawa’s finances

From the Fraser Institute
By Jake Fuss and Grady Munro
This week, after five months off and one federal election, Parliament will start a new session in Ottawa. And federal finances should be a top priority.
Too much of anything can be harmful. In recent years, both the size of government in Canada and the government debt burden have grown too large, harming economic growth and living standards. Why? Because when government grows too large, it begins taking over functions and resources that are better left to the private sector.
Consider this. From 2014 to 2024, total government spending in Canada (federal, provincial and local) increased from 38.4 per cent (as a share of GDP) to 44.7 per cent—the second-fastest increase among 40 advanced countries worldwide. Consequently, the total size of government in Canada increased from 25th highest to 17th highest (out of the same 40 countries). Again, this means that government now essentially controls a significantly larger share of our economy.
During the same 10-year period, Canada’s gross government debt (federal, provincial and local) increased from 85.5 per cent (as a share of GDP) to 110.8 per cent—the third-fastest increase among the 40 countries. As such, Canada’s debt ranking among the 40 countries increased from 14th highest to 7th highest.
Why should Canadians care?
A large government debt burden lands squarely on the backs of Canadians. For example, governments and the private sector compete for the limited pool of savings available for borrowing. As governments increase the amount they borrow, there are fewer savings available for the private sector. All else equal, this drives up interest costs and makes it more expensive for families to take out a mortgage or businesses to attract investment.
Moreover, debt accumulation today will likely mean higher taxes in the future. Indeed, a 16-year old Canadian in 2025 will pay an estimated $29,663 over their lifetime in additional personal income taxes (that they otherwise wouldn’t pay) due to ballooning federal debt. In other words, by accumulating debt today, the government is disproportionately burdening younger generations with higher taxes in the future.
Of course, when talking about Canada’s overall debt load, the federal government plays a big role. The Carney government says it will “build Canada into the strongest economy in the G7” by employing a “very different approach” to federal fiscal policy than its predecessor. Yet the Carney campaign platform promises to add to Ottawa’s mountain of debt (which currently stands at a projected $2.2 trillion) by running huge annual deficits until at least 2028/29, even outspending the Trudeau government’s previous plan. This is not a “very different approach.”
The Carney government plans to table its first budget in the fall. As Parliament resumes, let’s hope the new prime minister shows real leadership by charting a clear path towards fiscal sustainability and stronger economic growth.
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