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Trump says a Canadian ad misstated Ronald Reagan's views on tariffs. Here are the facts and context

PAUL WISEMAN
October 24, 2025

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump pulled out of trade talks with Canada Thursday night, furious over what he called a "fake'' television ad from Ontario's provincial government that quoted former U.S. President Ronald Reagan from 38 years ago criticizing tariffs -- Trump's favorite economic tool.

The ad features audio excerpts from an April 25, 1987 radio address in which Reagan said: "Over the long run such trade barriers hurt every American worker and consumer.''

Trump attacked the ad on Truth Social Friday posting: "CANADA CHEATED AND GOT CAUGHT!!! They fraudulently took a big buy ad saying that Ronald Reagan did not like Tariffs, when actually he LOVED TARIFFS FOR OUR COUNTRY, AND ITS NATIONAL SECURITY.?

The Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute criticized the ad on X Thursday night posting that it "misrepresents the 'Presidential Radio Address to the Nation on Free and Fair Trade' dated April 25, 1987."

While Trump called the ad fake, Reagan's words were real. But context is missing.

Here's a look at the facts:

Reagan, who held office during a period of growing fear over Japan's rising economic might, made the address a week after he himself had imposed tariffs on Japanese semiconductors; he was attempting to explain the decision, which seemed at odds with his reputation as a free trader.

Reagan did not, in fact, love tariffs. He often criticized government policies - including protectionist measures such as tariffs - that interfered with free commerce and he spent much of 1987 radio address spelling out the case against tariffs.

"High tariffs inevitably lead to retaliation by foreign countries and the triggering of fierce trade wars,'' he said. "The result is more and more tariffs, higher and higher trade barriers, and less and less competition. So, soon, because of the prices made artificially high by tariffs that subsidize inefficiency and poor management, people stop buying. Then the worst happens: Markets shrink and collapse; businesses and industries shut down; and millions of people lose their jobs.''

But Reagan's policies were more complicated than his rhetoric.

In addition to taxing Japanese semiconductors, Reagan slapped levies on heavy motorcycles from Japan to protect Harley-Davidson. He also strong-armed Japanese automakers into accepting "voluntary'' limitations on their exports to the United States, ultimately encouraging them to set up factories in the American Midwest and South.

And he pressured other countries to push down the value of the currencies to help make American exports more competitive in world markets.

Robert Lighthizer, a Reagan trade official who served as Trump's top trade negotiator from 2017 through 2021, wrote in his 2023 memoir that "President Reagan distinguished between free trade in theory and free trade in practice.''

In 1988, an analyst at the libertarian Cato Institute even declared Reagan " the most protectionist president since Herbert Hoover, the heavyweight champion of protectionists.''

Reagan, though, was no trade warrior. Discussing his semiconductor tariffs in the April 1987 radio address, he said that he was forced to impose them because the Japanese were not living up to a trade agreement and that "such tariffs or trade barriers and restrictions of any kind are steps that I am loath to take.''

Trump, on the other hand, has no such reticence. He argues that tariffs can protect American industry, draw manufacturing back to the United States and raise money for the Treasury. Since returning to the White House in January, he has slapped double-digit tariffs on almost every country on earth and targeted specific products including autos, steel and pharmaceuticals.

The average effective U.S. tariff rate has risen from around 2.5% at the start of the 2025 to 18%, highest since 1934, according to the Budget Lab at Yale University.

Trump's enthusiastic use of import taxes -- he has proudly called himself "Tariff Man'' -- has drawn a challenge from businesses and states charging that he overstepped his authority. The Constitution gives Congress the power to levy taxes, including tariffs, though lawmakers have gradually ceded considerable authority over trade policy to the White House. The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in the case early next month.

Trump claimed Thursday that the Canadian ad was intended "to interfere with the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, and other courts.''

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