OTTAWA — Strawberries became an unexpected topic at
Wednesday night’s French debate
in Montreal, with three of the four party leaders saying they’ve stopped buying American berries amidst trade tensions.
“I buy Quebec strawberries, and I do my own shopping by the way,” Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet told debate moderator Patrice Roy, when asked to name one U.S.-made product he no longer buys.
Blanchet’s aside was a cheeky shot at Liberal Leader Mark Carney, who acknowledged to Radio-Canada earlier this month that he doesn’t
anymore, now that he has a staff to do his daily chores as Canada’s prime minister.
Radio-Canada journalist: Are you still gonna buy American strawberries?
Mark Carney: Whoah lady, I don’t buy my own groceries, that’s nuts pic.twitter.com/mHtomUkcyw
— Elias Makos (@eliasmakos) April 4, 2025
Not to be left out, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh told the moderator that he now goes out of his way to buy a range of Canadian-grown produce, including both strawberries and apples — a fruit Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre famously chomped on in
.
“I do my own shopping, and I cook at home,” Singh said, one-upping Blanchet.
“Everybody is eating a lot of strawberries today,” quipped Roy following Singh’s response.
Poilievre called the lighthearted exchange a “delicious conversation” and added that Canadian sourced beef is the top sirloin in his household.
“I buy Canadian beef, it’s the best beef in the world,” said Poilievre, who grew up
.
“But I never buy American strawberries either,” he added.
For his part, Carney said that he’s stopped buying U.S. beer and wine — though the LCBO’s
prevents residents from purchasing those products.
The English debate is scheduled for 7 p.m. ET on Thursday.
National Post
rmohamed@postmedia.com
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