Politic?

This is a blog dedicated to a personal interpretation of political news of the day. I attempt to be as knowledgeable as possible before commenting and committing my thoughts to a day's communication.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Cheap Chinese EV Bargains in Canada -- Collapse of Canadian Auto Industry

"Unless this trade is tightly constrained, it’s likely to undermine Canada’s industrial base."
"If we take a wrong turn, an entire industrial ecosystem could be hollowed out or captured, leading to a dependency that erodes economic security, sovereignty, and democratic values."
Deeper economic entanglement with China is not a long-term route to achieving any of those goals. It's a dead end." 
"The fundamental problem is that the Chinese Communist Party has an agenda that is hostile to Western democracies because it seeks to weaken our governance and our societies."
"Tilting toward China is a risky bet that is likely to carry more negative costs for Canada than the positive benefits that it could potentially bring."
Michael Kovrig, geopolitical adviser, former diplomat 
 
"It's a massive risk."
"Canada's auto industry depends on our integration with North America and the U.S. specifically. That's been the foundation of the sector, going all the way back to the auto pact."
"An estimated hourly wage at a Chinese [plant] is between U.S. $2 and $4 an hour. Compare that to a unionized vehicle production plant in Canada, where your average wage is about $45 an hour, and that also includes pensions and benefits and a whole range of other advantages." 
Brian Kingston, president, CEO Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers' Association 
 
"We should welcome Chinese car manufacturers but set the rules similarly to what GM Canada had to do when it went to Shanghai in 2009."
"We should say, you are welcome to come to Canada, but you will have, after three years, to have about 30 percent of Canadian content, and after ten years, it has to be 100 percent content."
Guy Saint-Jacques former Canadian ambassador to China 

https://i.cbc.ca/ais/89b827aa-a8e4-4b28-bdef-1980efcfbbc6,1768583894853/full/max/0/default.jpg?im=Crop%2Crect%3D%28392%2C25%2C8247%2C4638%29%3BResize%3D860

Models pose near the BYD Seal 06 Dmi, unveiled during the Auto China 2024 show in Beijing, on April 25, 2024. China's largest EV maker has been expanding rapidly into overseas markets and could reach Canadian shores shortly following Ottawa's recent deal with Beijing. (Ng Han Guan/The Associated Press)

Second-guessing Prime Minister Mark Carney's triumphant visit to Beijing in January when he came back home to Canada with a prize; Beijing's agreement to lower tariffs on Canadian canola and pork. That didn't come out of the goodness of China's trading-heart, but it mightily pleased the Canadian agrifood industry after a trade spat that close to destroyed their always-dependable Chinese market. Canola, seafood and pork are important comestibles for the Chinese, but they are products considered in trade talk to be fungible; they can be acquired elsewhere. In return, the negotiators in Beijing smiled broadly when Mr. Carney agreed to drop the 100% tariff Ottawa levied on Chinese electric vehicles and to allow the entry under a favourable tariff rate, an initial 49,000 of the vehicles for the Canadian market.
 
The Canadian auto industry was anything but pleased. Chinese electric vehicles are priced very reasonably in comparison to their counterparts produced in North America. The Canadian auto industry has gone through an agonizing few years thanks to the Trump administration's decision to punish its neighbour for taking the U.S. for a trade ride for far too long, according to their logic. The heavily intertwined industry where parts go back and forth between Canada and the U.S. in production of vehicles had suited both countries very well in the past, where the new tariffs have left Canada's auto industry on its knees.
 
Carney loosens Chinese EV tariffs
Mark Carney smooth-talked the situation as an opportunity for Canadians to consider the purchase of a less expensive option where the market of such vehicles struggle with soaring prices. In five years, he said with confidence, over 50 percent of vehicles in North America will be available at an import price of less than $35,000. More affordable options at a potential cost to tens of thousands of auto industry jobs in Canada. "It's clear that this will be a delicate and sometimes difficult relationship to manage with risks and opportunities that must be carefully weighed, as we heard from the earlier witnesses today", noted director of policy and strategy at Clean Energy Canada, acknowledging the risks associated with Chinese companies accessing the Canadian auto market.
 
Michael Kovrig, whose experience with China was rather less than idyllic, when he was taken into custody while in China, accused of a conspiracy against China, and was imprisoned in less than stellar conditions, with 'soft' torture for almost three years for espionage, as was Michael Spavor, during a different, diplomatic drama when China was polishing up its hostage-diplomacy credentials, warns against any Canadian involvement with Chinese trade.  
 
He addressed the issue of harmful environmental practices and abuses of human rights well known to exist in the supply chains of Chinese production, inclusive of Chinese EV companies. Allegations of using forced labour in the construction of vehicles by BYD, include its plants located in Brazil and Hungary. The U.S.-based non-profit China Labor Watch recently reported evidence of brutal labour conditions for Chinese migrant workers at its facility in Hungary. BYD was also listed by Brazil on its registry of employers subjecting workers to slave labour conditions.
 
Former senior bureaucrat Margaret McCuaig-Johnston last month during testimony before a House of Commons committee cited a Human Rights Watch report that aluminum used in dozens of auto parts in Chinese EVs is likely to be produced by Uyghur forced labour. China-based Zhejiang Leapmotor Technology Co. discussed the potential with Stellantis of building Chinese EVs at their idled Brampton, Ontario plant. The plan involving "knock down" kits assembled in Canada, parts produced and shipped from China. A plan that would wholly diminish Canadian auto parts' and workers' importance in total auto production.
 
While the prime minister claimed Canadian legislation is designed to force companies to report on their supply chains, recognize forced labour elements and keep them out of the Canadian supply chain, critics point out that the Canada Border Services Agency since 2021 halted a mere two shipments containing forced labour, both from China. "The legislation is world class; the enforcement of the legislation is possibly less than world class", former Liberal MP John McKay stated. 
 
https://i.cbc.ca/ais/82e7b01c-3061-4861-aa69-539efa92f40c,1768588022687/full/max/0/default.jpg?im=Crop%2Crect%3D%280%2C0%2C6500%2C3652%29%3BResize%3D796
A BYD vehicle is assembled on the production line of the company's factory in Camacari, Brazil, on Oct. 9, 2025. (Joa Souza/Reuters)
"I think there are a number of concerns when it comes to this expansion of Chinese companies and their presence in the Canadian market."
"And human rights is one element of it, but economic security and national security concerns must also be considered."
Vina Nadjibulla, vice-president of research and strategy, Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada 
 

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Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Lecturing: Arrogance and Ideological Prejudice Against China

"We demonstrate conclusively that the policies, the law, the practices, and the campaigns in the region amounts to genocide exactly as laid out in the Genocide Convention [of the UN]."
"It puts the onus on governments, the 151 other state parties to the Genocide Convention, who have obligations under the treaty."
"The question is, will they have the courage to now act in the face of what is undoubtedly a systemic evil and a genocide?"
"We know that countries across the world including Canada are now implicated in complicity in genocide. And so that's actually a crime in itself."
"We've done the legwork and I hope that our government [Canada] and other governments will do the right thing."
"We need to make sure that we are moving forward appropriately and actually following up with the kinds of actions that are going to put an end to human rights abuses and that means working with our allies."
Yonah Diamond, legal counsel, The Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights
 
"China has simultaneously pursued a dual systematic campaign of forcibly sterilizing Uyghur women of child-bearing age and interning Uyghur men of child-bearing years, preventing the regenerative capacity of the group and evincing an intent to biologically destroy the group as such."
Wallenberg Centre Report
This file photo taken on June 4, 2019 shows a Uighur woman waiting with children on a street in Kashgar in China's northwest Xinjiang region.
A file photo shows a Uighur woman with children in China's northwest Xinjiang region   AFP
 
In 1948 the UN Convention on Genocide was created, responding to the revealed horrors of the Holocaust. The convention defines genocide quite specifically, making it quite clear that countries have a moral responsibility to act in response to another nation's embarking on genocidal actions impacting their population. This, in recognition that the world acted as a disinterested bystander when Nazi Germany embarked on its Final Solution remedy to the presence of Jews in Europe.

Signed by 152 countries in the world order, signees include both China and Canada. China, infamously, is conducting a campaign of cultural genocide augmented by a slow-motion ethnic genocide in the forced sterilization of their Turkic Muslim population in Xinjiang. Uyghur women, claims Chinese authorities in self-defence, are being gifted with better health prospects for their future, not having to bear children. 

China is in violation of the UN Genocide Convention through its program of imprisonment and forced sterilization of the Uyghur people. A new paper produced by the Raoul Wallenberg Centre and the Newlines Institute for Strategy and Policy which details the steady disintegration of the human rights of the Chinese Uyghurs. The international community has become aware of the situation and has broadly condemned Beijing for its institutionalized effort to eradicate the culture, heritage and religious base of Uyghurs.
Source: ‘Strengthening patriotism education and building a bridge of national unity’ (加强爱国主义教育搭建民族团结连心桥), China Ethnic Religion Net (中国民族宗教网), 7 November 2019

In publishing the conclusion of this study the Wallenberg Centre has called for Canada to enact sanctions against the Chinese Communist Party members involved in the campaign through the Magnitsky Act, beginning with trade sanctions against China, along with banning goods from the Xinjiang region known to be produced through slave labour. Relocation of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics is another call gaining momentum, to deprive Beijing of the legitimacy of their human rights infractions.
 
Effort taken to destroy an ethnic group need not necessarily take place through mass executions; a systemic agenda to destroy a race of people through forced sterilization represents yet another method of eliminating a group viewed as a nuisance or a threat to national unity. Canada's Parliament, in fact, voted unanimously several weeks earlier to name Beijing's campaign of internment, slave labour and forced sterilizations against its Uyghur population as a genocide. All members of Parliament, with the exception of the prime minister and members of his cabinet abstaining.
 
Source: ‘Municipal United Front Work Department’s “Pomegranate Seed” Night School: a look into Qingdao Taekwang’s Mandarin classes’ (市委统战部’石榴籽’夜校 走进青岛泰光举办普通话培训班), Laixi United Front (莱西统一战线), WeChat, 1 July 2019,
 
China denies any such accusations in spite of volumes of evidence, explaining that the mass internment centres in the country are in fact, re-education facilities and vital training centres. China's ambassador to Canada, Cong Peiwu, informed Canadian journalists the suggestion his government was in pursuit of a genocide solution to a troublesome minority represented the "lies of the century". Yet through meticulous research the report finds the CCP actively working to erase Uyghur culture.

A program is underway whereby Uyghur children are separated from their families and dispatched to other distant parts of the country to diminish contact with relatives and others like themselves. The report drew on the research of a wide range of experts, among whom were former Liberal cabinet minister and human rights activist Irwin Cotler, along with former Liberal cabinet ministers, Allan Rock and Lloyd Axworthy, all campaigning on behalf of human rights.

Britain's ambassador to Beijing, Caroline Wilson, was summoned to appear before China's foreign ministry for questioning and to receive formal objections to an "inappropriate" article she had written defending international media coverage on China. Her article, written in Mandarin was posed on the official WeChat account of the British embassy in Beijing. In her article, Ambassador Wilson explained that journalists' reports on China reflected "good faith" in monitoring government. "The whole article is full of 'lecturer' arrogance and ideological prejudice", she was informed by the Chinese ministry.

Note: Multiple dormitory buildings and a teaching building appear to be completely fenced in and isolated in a style that resembles other political indoctrination camps. Additionally, five small factory warehouse buildings have been constructed in the enclosed area. Source: ASPI’s International Cyber Policy Centre.

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