Resolution that would block tariffs passes 51-48 in Senate, in vote that shows Republican unease over presidentâs plans Several Republican senators joined Democrats to pass a resolution that would block Donald Trumpâs tariffs on Canada, a rare rebuke of the presidentâs trade policy just hours after he announced plans for sweeping import taxes on some of the countryâs largest trading partners. In a 51-48 vote, four Republicans â Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and both Kentucky senators, the former majority leader Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul â defied Trumpâs pressure campaign and supported the measure. Democrats used a procedural maneuver to force a vote on the resolution, which would terminate the national emergency on fentanyl Trump is using to justify tariffs on Canada. While Trumpâs sweeping new tariffs, introduced in a White House Rose Garden ceremony on Wednesday, did not include additional levies on Canada, the Senate vote amounted to a significant bipartisan condemnation of the presidentâs escalating global trade war with allies and enemies alike. âTariffs will hurt our families. Canada is not an enemy,â the Democratic senator Tim Kaine, the billâs sponsor, said in a floor speech on Wednesday. âLetâs not label an ally as an enemy. Letâs not impose punishing costs on American families at a time they canât afford it. Letâs not hurt American small businesses. Letâs not make our national security investments in ships and subs more expensive.â Republicans have expressed varying degrees of unease over Trumpâs clampdown on free trade â once a pillar of conservative orthodoxy â but few were willing to cross him, and many GOP leaders and supporters, including the House speaker, Mike Johnson, were in the Rose Garden on Wednesday â a day dubbed âliberation dayâ by the president â as a way of championing the historic barrage of tariffs on goods from overseas he believes will boost American manufacturing. The Senateâs legislation has practically no chance of passing the Republican-controlled House and being signed by Trump, but it showed the limits of Republican support for Trumpâs vision of remaking the US economy by restricting free trade. Many economists are warning that the plan could cause an economic contraction, and GOP senators are already watching with unease as Trump upends the United Statesâ relationship with the rest of the world. Before the vote, the Senate majority leader, John Thune of South Dakota, urged Republicans to oppose the resolution, arguing that the tariffs were needed to âensure that President Trump has the tools to combat the flow of fentanyl from all directionsâ. In a post on his social media platform, Truth Social, sent just before 1am ET on Wednesday, Trump assailed the four GOP senators who had expressed opposition to his tariffs, imploring them to âget on the Republican bandwagon, for a change, and fight the Democrats wild and flagrant push to not penalize Canada for the sale, into our Country, of large amounts of Fentanylâ. He vowed not to sign the measure if it reached his desk. Defending her vote, Collins said that the tariffs would hurt working families in her state of Maine, which shares a long border with Canada. âThe price hikes that will happen for Maine families, every time they go to the grocery store, they fill their gas tank, they fill their heating oil tank, if these tariffs go into effect, will be so harmful,â she said in a Wednesday floor speech. âAnd as price hikes always do, they will hurt those the most who can afford them the least.â Sign up to First Thing Our US morning briefing breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you whatâs happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion She also argued that fentanyl from Canada was not a major threat to the US, as Trumpâs national emergency claims. âThe fact is the vast majority of fentanyl in America comes from the southern border,â she said. Democrats argued that Americans were turning against Trumpâs agenda, pointing to a string of strong performances by their party in recent special elections that included a consequential victory in a Wisconsin state supreme court race on Tuesday night. âThe American people are seeing how bad Trump is,â the Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, said in a floor speech. âTariffs is a good part of it. And they are not supporting people like Elon Musk and those who support Donald Trump.â Earlier on Wednesday, the representative Gregory Meeks, the top Democrat on the House foreign affairs committee, said he would also force a similar vote in the House on the tariffs. âRepublicans canât keep ducking this â itâs time they show whether they support the economic pain Trump is inflicting on their constituents,â he wrote on X.
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Please check the original article here: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/apr/02/republicans-democrats-canada-tariffs.