Good morning. Donald Trump’s bewildering fight with Pope Leo is awfully familiar to Canadians – more on that below, along with Pierre Poilievre’s political future and the traders profiting off prediction markets. But first:

Trump has spent a lot of time over the past year insulting Canada on Truth Social. Alex Brandon/The Associated Press

The Pope must be perplexed. One cannot imagine that too many people had “President-Pontiff beef” on their political bingo card, but here we are, four days and several Truth Social posts into Donald Trump’s attempted takedown of Leo XIV.

The fracas seems to have started after Leo objected to religious language used by the White House to justify its war in Iran. Pope-like statements such as “blessed are the peacemakers” and “enough of war” apparently further provoked Trump’s ire. He’s attacked the Pope online as “Weak on Nuclear Weapons,” “WEAK on Crime” and “terrible for Foreign Policy.” He also said, twice, “I’m not a fan of Pope Leo” on a Washington tarmac late Sunday night.

But if anyone can empathize with these confusing broadsides, it’s Canadians. Although we might not be in Trump’s crosshairs at this exact moment – unless you count yet another overnight swipe at NATO yesterday – the U.S. President has berated us constantly since returning to the White House last January. How constantly? Globe reporter Tim Shufelt and data editor Dexter McMillan did heroic work sifting through all of Trump’s social media posts and public appearances to map his anti-Canada turn. They discovered that, in those 15 months, Trump insulted this country 720 times.

Shufelt and McMillan distilled Trump’s antipathy into five handy charts, each its own special bummer. Let’s take a closer look at two of them here.

The Globe and Mail

A quick bit of context: In the whole of 2017, Trump mentioned Canada just 58 times – even though our work to renegotiate NAFTA started that summer, ultimately resulting in the USMCA. Over the past year-plus, he’s had more to say about how we’re all a bunch of cheats, subsidized by the U.S. and ripping them off through the very trade deal that Trump signed into law.

The annexation talk covers off some of his preferred insults: “Governor Trudeau,” “Governor Carney,” the whole business about an “imaginary” or “artificial border” and, of course, references to the “51st state.” He also frequently accuses Canadian industries of unfair dealings, especially our auto sector, forestry, steel and aluminum, dairy and banks. (Trump seems to think U.S. banks can’t do business here. They can.)

But no threat has been wielded as often as tariffs, which will come as zero surprise. After all, “tariffs is the most beautiful word to me in the dictionary,” Trump said hours after his January inauguration, “because tariffs are going to make us rich as hell.”

The Globe and Mail

Actually, Trump’s tariffs on Canada aren’t making the U.S. rich as hell, but we’ll get to that. First, let’s recap his assorted promises to hike the rates.

Trump pledged blanket 10-per-cent tariffs on U.S. imports while out on the campaign trail, then raised it to 25 per cent on all Canadian goods at the start of his second term. He bumped up the general tariff rate to 35 per cent over the non-existent fentanyl problem at our border, then warned of a 10-per-cent increase after Ontario aired its Reagan-quoting, anti-tariff ad. He dangled another 10-per-cent threat over any country, Canada included, that opposed a U.S. takeover of Greenland. Then he went nuclear after Canada and China agreed to expand trade access, threatening 100-per-cent tariffs on all our exports to the States.

Here’s the catch: Because Trump’s tariffs exclude USMCA-compliant trade, the effective rate on Canadian goods has never exceeded 5 per cent. In fact, it’s sitting at just 3.25 per cent. That’s a number that Trump hasn’t once managed to mention, but perhaps he’s simply been too distracted by his beef with the Pope.

Internally displaced people at the Al Heshan camp in Port Sudan, Sudan. Bernat Armangue/The Associated Press

Canada pledged $120-million in aid for Sudan and its neighbours as the war enters its fourth year – more assistance than in 2025, though not as much as in 2024, and far from what’s urgently needed. Read more here about the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.