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Doug Ford criticizes Carney's China EV deal
Summary
Ontario Premier Doug Ford criticized a federal deal reported to allow 49,000 Chinese-made electric vehicles to be imported each year and said Prime Minister Mark Carney's team used 'burner phones' on the trip; the next step is undetermined at this time.
Content
Ontario Premier Doug Ford publicly criticized a federal agreement Prime Minister Mark Carney reached with China on electric vehicles. The reported deal would allow 49,000 Chinese-made EVs to be imported into Canada each year. Ford said Ontario and its auto workers received nothing from the arrangement and described the outcome as a threat. He also raised concerns about vehicle technology and about the prime minister's team using what he described as "burner phones" while on the trip.
Key points:
- The reported agreement was described as permitting 49,000 Chinese-made electric vehicles to be imported annually.
- Premier Doug Ford said Ontario and its auto workers were left out and called the outcome a "massive threat."
- Ford said Chinese EVs use technology he characterized as capable of spying on users, as reported.
- Ford said the prime minister and his team used "burner phones" during the trip and questioned the decision on that basis.
Summary:
The remarks highlight provincial concern about the reported deal's implications for Ontario's auto sector and about privacy-related issues raised by the premier. Undetermined at this time.
