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BREAKING: Congress Votes To End Trump's Canada Tariff Scam As Canada's Popularity In America Is Crushing The Trump Regime.
Six Republicans defect • Canada’s economic counterpunch lands • Trump threatens his own caucus • The tariff racket starts to crack
February 12, 2026
Donald Trump wasn’t supposed to lose this vote.
The House wasn’t supposed to embarrass him.
Republicans weren’t supposed to cross him.
And yet — 219 to 211 — they did.
The U.S. House of Representatives voted to rescind Trump’s tariffs on Canadian goods. Six Republicans broke ranks and joined Democrats. It’s symbolic for now. The Senate is a long shot. Trump will never sign it. But symbolism matters when it exposes weakness.
And this vote exposed something Trump hates more than losing: erosion.
The Revolt on the Floor
The resolution came from Gregory Meeks, who accused Trump of weaponizing tariffs against allies and driving up prices at home. He’s right. Tariffs are taxes. They don’t punish foreign governments. They punish supply chains and consumers.
Six Republicans decided they were done pretending otherwise:
Don Bacon
Brian Fitzpatrick
Mike Lawler
Ken Buck
David Joyce
Maria Elvira Salazar
In a chamber where Republicans cling to a thin majority, six defections aren’t background noise. They’re a signal flare.
Bacon said it plainly: tariffs are a “net negative” and a tax paid by American consumers, farmers, and manufacturers.
That sentence should have ended the debate months ago. Instead, it took a public rebellion.
House Speaker MAGA Mike Johnson tried to block the discussion. He failed because he’s a failure. The vote happened. Trump lost control of the floor, then proceeded to lose whatever is left of his mind.
And the answer to that is, “not much”…
Trump’s Threats Prove the Point
As lawmakers debated, Trump was on Truth Social, issuing a warning to his own party:
“Any Republican… that votes against TARIFFS will seriously suffer the consequences come Election time.”
When policy needs threats to survive, it’s already rotting.
This is the heart of Trump’s tariff regime. It isn’t strategy. It isn’t economic doctrine. It’s leverage. Loyalty enforced through intimidation. Tariffs as political cudgel.
For years, that formula worked. But this vote showed something new: fear is losing its edge and the Rapist President’s influence is toast.
Canada Didn’t Fold — It Counterpunched
Trump assumed Canada would absorb the blow.
Instead, Canada responded carefully and deliberately. It didn’t shout. It adjusted.
Canadians are the largest group of foreign visitors to the United States. Before this tariff escalation, they poured roughly $20–22 billion annually into the U.S. economy.
Florida winter rentals.
Arizona snowbird communities.
Michigan outlet malls.
New York border towns.
Maine retail corridors.
When tariffs escalated and rhetoric soured, behavior shifted. Border crossings (land) reduced by 55%, year over year. Cross-border retail has plummeted 65%. Tourism has collapsed in key states by up to 80%. California and Florida are begging Canadians to return.
You don’t insult your biggest customer and then expect record sales.
Meanwhile, Canadian consumers leaned into “Buy Canadian” campaigns. Provincial liquor boards reduced U.S. purchases. Retailers shifted sourcing. Agricultural retaliation hit American producers where it always does — in the margins.
Tariffs don’t exist in isolation. They trigger responses. And those responses ripple straight into swing districts.
Strategic Self-Sabotage
After imposing tariffs, Trump escalated further, threatening a 100% import tax if Canada deepens trade ties with China.
Read that carefully.
Punish an ally.
Push them to diversify.
Then punish them again for diversifying.
Gregory Meeks warned that Trump’s trade war is pushing Canada closer to China. He’s not speculating. He’s describing cause and effect.
Trade relationships fill vacuums. When the United States destabilizes its closest partner, other powers step in.
That’s not a strength. That’s geopolitical malpractice by a complete and total moron with stage 12 dementia who last night claimed, out of nowhere, to be a Vietnam Vet
The Supreme Court Shadow
Hovering over all of this is the Supreme Court of the United States, which is preparing to rule on whether Trump exceeded his executive authority when imposing sweeping tariffs under emergency trade laws.
If the Court curbs that authority, the tariff machine shrinks overnight.
If it doesn’t, presidents inherit the power to tax entire industries without meaningful congressional oversight.
This case isn’t about steel or dairy. It’s about executive power. It’s about whether tariffs are a constitutional tool or a personal instrument of political control.
Popularity Tells the Story
Polling paints an uncomfortable contrast.
Canada maintains favorability ratings north of 70 percent among Americans. Trump’s approval remains in the high 20s to low 30s nationally. In Canada, distrust of Trump is overwhelming - around 70%.
To say Canada hates Trump as much as America loves Canada would be accurate.
Think about that dynamic.
America’s closest ally is more popular inside the United States than the President leading it.
Trump’s tariffs didn’t weaken Canada’s reputation. They strengthened it. Canada is seen as stable. Predictable. Democratic. Reliable.
The White House is seen as volatile.
That perception gap matters in trade, diplomacy, and business confidence.
Symbolic — But Not Harmless
Yes, the Senate remains Republican. Yes, Trump would veto the measure. But symbolism isn’t meaningless when it exposes fracture lines.
Six Republicans chose economic math over political fear.
That’s new.
For years, Trump’s grip on the GOP has depended on three things: intimidation, inevitability, and financial alignment. If business leaders, farmers, and manufacturers begin applying sustained pressure, loyalty shifts.
Economic pain travels faster than ideology.
When farmers lose contracts, they notice.
When manufacturers see input costs rise, they notice.
When tourism dollars dry up in border states, governors notice.
And when swing-district members see polling slide, they act.
The GOP Economic Mutiny
This vote is not the end of Trump’s tariff war.
It is the first organized crack in it.
Tariffs were sold as strength. In practice, they operate as hidden taxes. They inflate prices. They provoke retaliation. They strain alliances. They complicate supply chains.
Republicans used to argue this themselves.
Now, six of them rediscovered that position in public.
That isn’t betrayal. It’s survival.
The party’s business wing understands something the MAGA base does not: you cannot run on inflation relief while defending policies that raise costs. You cannot preach free markets while centralizing trade authority in one man.
And you cannot indefinitely threaten your own caucus without someone eventually deciding the threat is less dangerous than the policy.
The Beginning of Erosion
Political power doesn’t collapse overnight.
It erodes.
Quietly. Incrementally. Publicly.
This vote was erosion.
Six Republicans decided that Trump’s tariff doctrine was no longer politically or economically defensible. That calculation spreads. Once one faction breaks, others reassess.
If tariffs can be challenged, other executive overreaches can be questioned.
If fear loses its grip in one vote, it weakens in the next.
The House vote was not a policy triumph. It was a psychological turning point.
Trump’s tariff regime depends on compliance. The House just showed compliance isn’t automatic anymore.
That’s the beginning of something far more consequential than a single resolution.
It’s the beginning of a GOP economic mutiny.
And once the money wing defects, the rest of the coalition eventually follows.
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—Dean






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