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Ottawa, November 23, 2025 — Canada said it will resume US trade talks “when appropriate,” a cautiously worded signal that has immediately rattled business groups and trade watchers on both sides of the border. The Reuters headline — that Canada will resume US trade talks ‘when appropriate’ — sounds diplomatic, but within hours it was being read as a clear message: Ottawa is not rushing back to the table, and Washington may have less leverage than it thinks.
Behind that one phrase lies a web of stalled negotiations on agriculture, digital trade, critical minerals, green subsidies, and renewed tensions over the border’s role in national security and industrial policy. The US and Canada move nearly $3 billion in goods and services across their border every day, and even a hint of sustained friction has implications for automakers, farmers, tech firms, and energy producers from Alberta to Michigan.
This is not a trade war — not yet. But the language out of Ottawa signals that Canada is prepared to wait, calibrate, and leverage both domestic politics and global alliances before re-engaging in full-scale talks. For markets, manufacturers, and workers, the question is no longer whether talks resume, but on whose terms.
On November 23, 2025, a Canadian government spokesperson confirmed to Reuters that Canada will resume trade talks with the United States “when appropriate”, following weeks of behind-the-scenes tension over tariffs, clean-tech subsidies, and regulatory alignment under the US–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA).
The remark came after a series of quiet but escalating moves:
In that context, the latest remarks were carefully calibrated. The spokesperson did not say talks were suspended, and did not accuse Washington of bad faith. Instead, the phrase “when appropriate” suggested Ottawa is deliberately slowing the pace of engagement while it reassesses leverage, coordinates with industry, and gauges US political dynamics heading into an intense election cycle and a volatile Congress.
According to a senior Canadian official quoted anonymously in domestic media later in the day, “We are not walking away from the table, but we are no longer prepared to treat urgency as a one-way street. The US has domestic politics; so do we.” That alone is a noteworthy shift. For years, Canada has typically framed itself as the flexible, rules-based partner eager to smooth over frictions. This time, it is signalling conditions.
US officials, speaking on background, described the comment as “unhelpful” but “not unexpected,” noting that several working groups were still meeting on technical issues but that higher-level political talks were “on pause until there’s clarity about next steps.”
At first glance, the phrase “when appropriate” might sound like bureaucratic filler. In trade diplomacy, it is anything but. It is a public way of saying: We are not desperate. We can wait.
The stakes are huge. The US–Canada bilateral trade relationship is one of the largest in the world, with annual two-way trade exceeding $900 billion when services are included. Supply chains in autos, aerospace, agri-food, and energy do not respect the border; a vehicle built in Ontario can cross into the US multiple times before final assembly.
Any perception of instability affects:
Politically, the timing is delicate. The US is heading into a fiercely contested political year, with trade policy once again framed through the lenses of reshoring, national security, and China competition. Canada, meanwhile, faces domestic pressure not to be perceived as simply absorbing the spillover of Washington’s subsidy race and security agenda.
By choosing this moment to say it will resume US trade talks “when appropriate,” Ottawa is sending a domestic and international signal:
The message lands in a world already recalibrating global trade: more industrial policy, more security language, and less faith in old-style liberalization. US–Canada relations are not breaking; they are being renegotiated for a more transactional era.
Within hours of the Reuters alert hitting feeds, social platforms lit up with sharply divergent interpretations of Canada’s stance.
In r/CanadaPolitics, a highly upvoted thread titled “Canada tells US trade talks will resume ‘when appropriate’ — finally some backbone?” captured a mix of pride and anxiety.
On r/Economics, an AMA-like thread sprung up with users asking whether the comment could impact the Canadian dollar or USMCA dispute mechanisms. Most top-voted responses landed on a similar point: symbolism matters, but systems and treaties matter more. The consensus was that markets would react more to concrete measures (tariffs, quotas, regulatory changes) than to rhetoric, but that repeated rhetoric could harden positions and make those measures more likely.
Notably, among business-focused LinkedIn posts, the tone was cooler but more cautious. Supply chain managers and industry lobbyists stressed the need for “policy visibility” and “line of sight on North American frameworks” — corporate code for: tell us if we need a Plan B.
Trade experts and policy analysts are reading Canada’s statement less as a sudden rupture and more as a tactical adjustment in a longer, structural shift in North American economic strategy.
Dr. Elena Rossi, a trade law professor at the University of Toronto, argues that the comment cannot be separated from the broader lifecycle of the USMCA (the successor to NAFTA), which is itself heading toward a critical review period.
“USMCA contains a built-in joint review in 2026,” Rossi notes. “We are now in the pre-review positioning phase. Every signal, every delay, every complaint is also about shaping that 2026 conversation. When Canada says ‘when appropriate,’ part of what they’re saying is: we will re-engage when it’s strategically aligned with that review, not simply because the US is impatient today.”
She adds that Ottawa’s language also buys domestic political space. “The Canadian government needs to demonstrate that it’s not just absorbing US industrial policy shocks. Signalling conditional engagement is a way to say: yes, we need this relationship, but we expect reciprocity.”
Mark Delgado, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Center for Strategic Industry, links the statement directly to frictions around the green transition.
“The US has unleashed a massive subsidy regime under the Inflation Reduction Act and related bills,” Delgado says. “Canada responded with its own package, but there’s a growing perception in Ottawa that the playing field isn’t level. If US rules make it easier to claim credits in, say, Ohio than in Ontario, capital will follow. Canada is not going to sprint into trade talks that lock in that asymmetry.”
Delgado notes that Canada’s edge in critical minerals gives it leverage. “If you’re Washington and your strategic memos all say ‘secure non-Chinese sources of lithium, nickel, cobalt,’ you cannot afford to alienate your most stable, proximate provider. Ottawa knows that. That’s the subtext of ‘when appropriate’ — we know how badly you need what we have.”
Not all experts are sanguine. Sarah Kim, a supply chain strategist who advises multinational manufacturers, warns that even soft signaling can have hard consequences over time.
“Businesses don’t wait for official breakdowns,” Kim explains. “They respond to trends. If they see recurring disputes, slowed talks, and ambiguous timelines, they start pricing in risk. That can mean diversifying away from certain cross-border routes, delaying investments, or insisting on contract clauses tied to regulatory outcomes. All of that raises costs.”
For her, the danger is less an immediate tariff war and more a slow erosion of the border’s perceived stability. “North America’s competitive advantage has always been deep integration plus relative predictability. Chip away at either, and you’re nudging firms to think about other hubs — from Southeast Asia to EU–US corridors.”
Several analysts stress that both governments are playing to domestic audiences as much as to each other.
Jean-François Bouchard, a Quebec-based political economist, frames it simply: “In Canada, no party wants to be seen as capitulating to US pressure, especially on dairy, culture, and natural resources. In the US, no serious candidate wants to be painted as soft on trade or outsourcing. That’s a combustible mix.”
Bouchard suggests the phrase “when appropriate” is partly aimed at nationalist critics at home: “It sounds firm but non-confrontational. It says: we will engage, but not on bended knee.”
On the US side, trade strategists in Washington are wary of looking like they’re chasing Ottawa. “There’s a perception here that we’re the bigger market and therefore the natural agenda-setter,” says a former USTR adviser. “If Canada slows things down, some in DC instinctively want to respond with pressure — more investigations, louder rhetoric, maybe even targeted moves in sectors like lumber or dairy. That’s how spirals start.”
Financial markets, at least initially, appeared to view the news as noise rather than signal. The Canadian dollar showed only modest intraday volatility against the US dollar, and major indices in Toronto and New York edged on according to broader macro themes: interest-rate expectations, tech earnings, and global growth uncertainty.
Yet currency strategists caution against complacency. “Trade rhetoric has a cumulative effect,” notes Priya Natarajan, FX strategist at a Toronto-based bank. “If we see a pattern of headlines about stalled talks, new disputes, or hints of retaliatory measures, traders will begin to price in a small but growing risk premium for CAD assets tied to cross-border flows.”
For now, she says, markets are “listening more to central banks than trade negotiators.” But that can change quickly if diplomacy sours and concrete measures follow.
Despite the dramatic headlines, most insiders expect a slow, managed process rather than a sudden rupture.
Even as high-level language cools, technical teams from both sides are expected to keep meeting. These working groups deal with rules of origin, customs procedures, sanitary and phytosanitary measures, and digital trade standards.
“Think of it as maintenance mode,” says Rossi. “No one wants trucks stuck at the border or sudden reclassification of components. So the machinery of cooperation keeps humming, even while politicians signal distance.”
With the US entering a high-stakes electoral phase, trade negotiators will have shrinking political bandwidth. Any concession can be weaponized. That reality likely informs Canada’s choice to wait for a more “appropriate” moment — perhaps after key primaries, legislative showdowns, or leadership tests are resolved.
“If you’re Ottawa, the worst time to negotiate is when the other side’s politics are at maximum volatility,” notes Delgado. “You risk becoming a prop in someone else’s campaign ad.”
Analysts flag several areas to watch over the next 6–12 months:
Corporations are unlikely to wait for full clarity. Expect:
None of this means a breakdown is inevitable. It does mean that the apparent calm of “business as usual” is more fragile than it appears.
Canada’s statement that it will resume US trade talks “when appropriate” is a carefully chosen phrase that speaks to a new phase in North American economic relations. On November 23, 2025, Ottawa signaled not a rejection of Washington, but a recalibration of urgency and leverage in a relationship that underpins nearly a trillion dollars in annual trade.
Beneath the surface jargon lies a simple reality: both countries are wrestling with how to balance national industrial strategies, climate goals, and political optics without blowing up a deeply integrated economic space. The US wants to lock in reshoring and green manufacturing advantages. Canada wants to make sure it is not left as collateral damage in a subsidy race it did not start but cannot ignore.
For now, the smart money is on continued, quiet cooperation underneath a more transactional, occasionally tense public dialogue. USMCA’s 2026 review looms as a forcing mechanism, and both sides know they cannot afford a serious fracture. But the language has changed, and with it, expectations.
“When appropriate” is not a pause button forever. It is a reminder that even the closest allies renegotiate the terms of engagement in an era defined by security, climate, and industrial policy. The next moves — in Ottawa, Washington, and corporate boardrooms — will determine whether this moment becomes a footnote in a resilient partnership, or the opening line of a slower, subtler decoupling.