Canada STUNNED As GM QUIETLY Reveals The REAL Reason It's Leaving Canada

In this breakdown, we examine General Motors’ decision to cut hundreds of jobs at its Oshawa, Ontario plant and what it reveals about the shifting future of Canadian manufacturing. While GM framed the move around demand and changing trade conditions, the broader record points to a much deeper story: production pressure from U.S. tariffs, public investment in Canadian facilities, and a company quietly redirecting truck output across the border. We look at how the loss of a midnight shift in Oshawa became more than a local layoff—it became a symbol of how fragile industrial jobs can become when corporate strategy, trade policy, and government subsidies collide. We also analyze the wider economic consequences for Ontario’s auto sector, from the workers directly affected to the suppliers, small businesses, and communities built around these plants. With similar uncertainty hitting GM’s CAMI facility in Ingersoll and forecasts warning of deeper manufacturing losses, this story raises serious questions about whether Canada’s industrial policy is strong enough to protect the jobs it helps fund. The issue is not simply that trucks are no longer being built in one place. It is that the work, the investment, and the long-term economic benefits appear to be moving somewhere else while Canadian workers are left to absorb the damage. Turn on notifications to stay updated! 🔔🔔🔔