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Canada’s new ‘fentanyl czar’ to liaise with U.S. on border drug security

Minister says new position an addition to $1.3B border plan Canada announced weeks ago
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Public Safety Minister David McGuinty speaks with reporters as he makes his way to caucus on Parliament Hill, Friday, Jan 24, 2025 in Ottawa. McGuinty says Canada is committed to combatting fentanyl on both sides of the border. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

Federal Public Safety Minister David McGuinty says Canada’s new “fentanyl czar” will serve as a liaison between Canada and the U.S. on cross-border efforts to curb fentanyl traffic.

McGuinty was in Emerson, Man., this morning attending a border security exercise.

Ottawa announced the new position on Monday in response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to impose 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian imports.

Those tariffs were to have taken effect today but Trump called them off until March after speaking with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau about Canada’s border response on Monday.

McGuinty says the fentanyl czar is among some additions to the $1.3 billion border plan Canada announced weeks ago in an attempt to head off Trump’s tariff threat.

Less than one per cent of fentanyl entering the United States comes from Canada, and McGuinty says illegal border crossings from Canada to the U.S. are down 89 per cent since last summer.