Saskatchewan’s liquor board says it will start buying and distributing American booze to retailers, months after Premier Scott Moe announced it would stop doing so.
Saskatchewan Liquor & Gaming spokesman David Morris says the action will allow the agency to sell existing inventories of U.S.-produced products as well as purchase new stock.
He says the decision is about allowing people to choose between buying American or locally made products.

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The move comes three months after Moe announced the province would stop doing so during Canada’s tariff war with the U.S.
Morris says Ottawa’s 25 per cent tariff on U.S. alcohol remains in place and that the added cost is expected to be a “significant factor.”
The Alberta government last week confirmed it would start buying American alcohol again in a “renewed commitment to open and fair trade” with the United States.
The Saskatchewan Liquor and Gaming Authority (SLGA) says it will start buying and distributing American booze again, reversing one of the province’s countermeasures to U.S. tariffs.
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