Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
International

Biden in Michigan to talk Buy American

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Sep, 2020 11:01 PM
  • Biden in Michigan to talk Buy American

e Biden ventured into America's hard-hit manufacturing heartland Wednesday, promising a suite of Buy American tax credits and penalties to fortify his blue-collar bona fides and pry working-class votes away from Donald Trump — measures sure to conjure sweaty palms in Canada.

During a visit to the Detroit suburb of Warren, Mich., the cradle of the U.S. auto industry and the buckle of the Rust Belt, Biden hammered away at his Republican rival's "America First" credentials in a battleground state the sitting president won by a scant 11,000 votes in 2016.

If elected, Biden said, he would impose stiff new tax penalties on companies that manufacture U.S.-bound products outside the country, create incentives for keeping jobs on U.S. soil and close what he called "Trump loopholes" that allow companies engaged in offshoring to avoid paying U.S. taxes.

He's also promising executive orders to more strictly enforce and "expand and tighten" Buy American provisions, make U.S. products more competitive, expand the list of "critical materials" that must be American-made and establish a "Made in America" office within the White House.

"We can revitalize our industrial base as the heart of the American middle class," Biden said, standing before a display of U.S.-built cars and trucks.

"I don't accept the defeatist view that the forces of automation and globalization mean we can't keep good-paying union jobs here in America and create more of them. I don't buy for one second that the vitality of American manufacturing is a thing of the past."

Canada is no stranger to Buy American heartburn.

As Barack Obama's vice-president, Biden presided over the implementation of the 2009 Recovery Act, an $800-billion stimulus package enacted in the midst of the Great Recession that restricted the use of foreign materials and international bids on U.S. infrastructure projects — rules from which it took Canada nearly a year to negotiate a waiver.

"It's not going to be any walk in the park," said Eric Miller, a Canada-U.S. expert and president of the D.C.-based Rideau Potomac Strategy Group. "Canada is going to have to have its elbows up and fight just as hard in the corners with a Biden administration."

After nearly four years of tumultuous Trump rule, it's not unreasonable for Canadians to assume a Democrat in the White House would be better for the cross-border relationship — and many do, a new poll suggests.

Two-thirds of the 1,529 Canadian respondents to the online poll, conducted by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies, said Canada-U.S. ties would improve under Biden. A similar percentage — 69 per cent — said relations will worsen if Trump is re-elected.

Given the political climate in the U.S., it's hardly surprising that the Democrats are using protectionist rhetoric to appeal to the same working-class voters who helped send Trump to Washington in the first place, Miller added.

"To some extent, there's going to be frictions and complexities regardless of who wins. It's just that the frictions and complexities under Trump will be different than the frictions and complexities under Biden."

The new "Made in America" office would have the power to review all Buy American waivers and establish a public record of any and all of them, Biden added, "to make sure we enforce Buy American and direct the full purchasing power of the federal government to fulfil its promise, starting by closing those waiver loopholes immediately."

There was significant economic anxiety and anger in 2009 in the U.S., which was in the throes of an economic meltdown at the time — American property values had plummeted and Washington was bailing out Wall Street, said Gary Doer, who was Canada's ambassador to the U.S. when the Recovery Act was introduced.

"There was a lot of pitchforks, metaphorically speaking," Doer recalled of the public mood — and both Congress and the White House were under pressure to ensure that the administration's big-ticket spending plans would primarily benefit Americans.

Eleven years later, in the throes of the COVID-19 pandemic, the "Buy American" battle cry may be more about politics than policy, Doer suggested: "It's a good bumper sticker."

Canada does have an advantage, he added: strong organized-labour ties between manufacturing unions and their members on either side of the Canada-U.S. border, a relationship that proved vital during the 2009 talks.

"It's not something (Biden) will acknowledge during a very tight campaign, but he has a very close relationship with the hardhats right now," Doer said.

"The private-sector unions have members on both sides of the border, they have the duty of representation for their members on both sides of the border, and they were the reason why we were the only country to get a waiver."

Canada's Chamber of Commerce will wait for the election dust to settle in the U.S. before drafting a strategy, said Mark Agnew, the chamber's senior director of international policy.

"I think a lot of the rhetoric that Joe Biden would employ as president would certainly be different, and I think there hopefully would be a more collaborative approach to working with Canada," Agnew said.

"But I don't think we should be under any illusion that Joe Biden is, you know, a neo-liberal economic president. There's still going to be a fairly hardline edge to it. The name 'Made in America' I think speaks for itself in many respects."

MORE International ARTICLES

Pak Fares Badly In Terror Financing Report Ahead Of Key FATF Plenary Meeting

Ahead of the FATF plenary meeting, the APG, in its detailed report released on Sunday, shows how Islamabad's financial institutions have been largely slack in implementing the measures in curbing terrorist financing/money laundering.

Pak Fares Badly In Terror Financing Report Ahead Of Key FATF Plenary Meeting

Pak Army Unhappy With Imran Khan Over Handling Of Economy: Experts

Pakistan's Army chief, Gen Qamar Bajwa's meeting with industry leaders should come as no surprise as the Pakistan Army is a major "corporate entity", but it is also a signal that the army is unhappy with Imran Khan over his handling of the economy and could choose to replace him, say experts.

Pak Army Unhappy With Imran Khan Over Handling Of Economy: Experts

Warning: Malicious Flaw Affects 1 Billion WhatsApp Users

The report by Forbes goes on to state, “The bug has been identified and patched—the specifics of how it’s exploited matter less now than ensuring that users update to the latest version of the app.

Warning: Malicious Flaw Affects 1 Billion WhatsApp Users

Greta Thunberg Changes Her Twitter Bio To Mock Putin After He Criticised Her Speech

At the summit, Greta accused world leaders and politicians of being apathetic towards climate change and also destroying her childhood with their empty words and promises.

Greta Thunberg Changes Her Twitter Bio To Mock Putin After He Criticised Her Speech

Ex-Pak Ruler Pervez Musharraf Plans Return To Politics On October 6

Ex-Pak Ruler Pervez Musharraf Plans Return To Politics On October 6
Pervez Musharraf, 76, who has been living in Dubai since March 2016, is facing a treason case for suspending the Constitution in 2007, a punishable offence for which he was indicted in 2014. A conviction for high treason carries the death penalty or life imprisonment.  

Ex-Pak Ruler Pervez Musharraf Plans Return To Politics On October 6

Facebook Encryption Threatens Public Safety, UK Home Secretary Priti Patel Tells CEO Mark Zuckerberg

Priti Patel, the senior-most minister in the UK Cabinet stressed that while strong encryption was important for privacy, there was a need to balance data security with law enforcement requirements.  

Facebook Encryption Threatens Public Safety, UK Home Secretary Priti Patel Tells CEO Mark Zuckerberg