Smith Urges Canada to Address Fentanyl Crisis, Calls for End to Excuses and Unfair Comparisons to Mexico
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith called for a more serious approach to addressing U.S. concerns over fentanyl trafficking and criticized emphasizing the point that the flow of fentanyl from Canada to the United States is merely a fraction of that from Mexico.
In a Feb. 4 interview with CTV News, Smith said Canada’s recent efforts to address U.S. concerns about the fentanyl trade played a key role in pausing the looming Canada–U.S. trade war. However, she stressed the need to seize the opportunity to make progress, ensuring the battle won’t be reignited.
“[Trump] wants us to recognize that Canada enjoys a very special relationship with the U.S. that no other country in the world enjoys, and just show the respect of taking seriously the fact that they’ve got people dying and they want it to stop,” Smith said, criticizing the argument that the fentanyl flow from Canada is much less than from Mexico.
“We should stop making excuses, stop saying, ‘Yeah, but we’re not as bad as the other guys.’ We should just say, ‘Yes, we agree, and we’re going to take care of our part of the issue so you don’t have to worry about us anymore,’” she added.
Alberta Fentanyl Czar
Before Ottawa reached a truce on tariffs with the United States on Feb. 3, Smith had urged the federal government to appoint a “border czar” to work with the Trump administration in cracking down on the flow of drugs and illegal migration at the border.
As one of the conditions for Trump to pause the tariffs, the federal government on Feb. 3 committed to appointing a “fentanyl czar.” The role involves coordinating between law enforcement and government agencies on both sides of the border to tackle fentanyl trafficking.
“As a province, in addition to the border security measures already taken, I have instructed my government to take immediate steps to significantly increase police and prosecutorial resources to go after the Fentanyl labs, kingpins and dealers that are responsible for killing 49,000 Canadians since 2016,” Smith wrote.
Canada had planned retaliatory tariff against the United States if Trump followed through with his tariff threats, with the first-phase countermeasure set to come into effect on the same day as the U.S. tariffs, Feb. 4.
Meanwhile, an additional 10 percent tariff ordered by Trump on existing tariffs targeting all goods imported from China went into effect on Feb. 4, with Beijing responding with counter-tariffs the same day.