Flags of Canada and the United States are shown in San Francisco on October 10, 2025. © Jeff Chiu, AP

Ontario pulls anti-tariff Reagan ad after Trump terminated Canada trade talks

· France 24

The leader of Canada’s most populous province said Friday he’ll pull the anti-tariff ad campaign that prompted US President Donald Trump to end trade talks with Canada. 

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said he’s decided to pause the advertising campaign after talking with Prime Minister Mark Carney. The ad will be pulled on Monday so trade talks can resume. 

Trump announced he’s ending “all trade negotiations” with Canada because of a television ad sponsored by Ontario that used the words of former President Ronald Reagan to criticise US tariffs. 

“We’ve achieved our goal, having reached US audiences at the highest levels," Ford said in a statement. 

“Our intention was always to initiate a conversation about the kind of economy that Americans want to build and the impact of tariffs on workers and businesses."

Ford said the commercials will continue to run this weekend, including during the first World Series games between the Toronto Blue Jays and Los Angeles Dodgers. 

“I’ve directed my team to keep putting our message in front of Americans over the weekend so that we can air our commercial during the first two World Series games,” he said. 

On Thursday, Trump posted, “The Ronald Reagan Foundation has just announced that Canada has fraudulently used an advertisement, which is FAKE, featuring Ronald Reagan speaking negatively about Tariffs.”

Trump doubled down on his criticism of the Ontario ad Friday and accused Canada of trying to influence an upcoming US Supreme Court ruling on his global tariff regime.

Trump’s call for an abrupt end to negotiations has further inflamed trade tensions between the neighbours and longtime allies. 

Read moreTrump terminating Canada trade talks over anti-tariff Reagan ad campaign

Carney said this week he aims to double his country’s exports to countries outside the US because of the threat posed by Trump’s tariffs. Canadian officials remain ready to continue talks to reduce tariffs in certain sectors, he said. 

“We can’t control the trade policy of the United States. We recognize that that policy has fundamentally changed from the 1980s,” Carney said Friday morning before boarding a flight to Asia. “We have to focus on what we can control and realize what we can’t control.”

Carney is trying to secure a trade deal with Trump, but tariffs are taking a toll in the aluminium, steel, auto and lumber sectors.

Carney spoke to Ford Thursday night and again Friday. 

White House spokesman Kush Desai said talks with Canada have not led to any constructive progress. 

“Ontario’s taxpayer-funded ad campaign on American TV networks – that misleadingly edited President Reagan’s 1987 radio address about trade – is the latest example of how Canadian officials would rather play games than engage with the Administration," Desai said in a statement. 

“As President Trump made clear on Truth Social, further talks are a futile effort if Canada can’t be serious.”

The Ontario government has said it would pay about $75 million Canadian for the ads to air across multiple American television stations using audio and video of Reagan speaking about tariffs in 1987.

Ford said the aim is to “blast” the pro-trade message to Americans. 

“It’s real, because it was coming from the best president the country’s ever seen, Ronald Reagan," Ford said. “I feel the Reagan Republicans are going to be fighting with the MAGA group, and let's hope, Reagan Republicans win.”

(FRANCE 24 with AP)