Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
International

In U.S., Canada's 'game plan' for Trump all about stepping up the tempo of talks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2023 06:01 PM
  • In U.S., Canada's 'game plan' for Trump all about stepping up the tempo of talks

Canada's ambassador to Washington typically doesn't get a whole lot of notice before the president of the United States makes a decision with the potential to reverberate beyond the country's borders. 

But when President Joe Biden signed a measure to better ensure U.S. companies and workers reap the lion's share of the benefits of American research and development, Kirsten Hillman had known about it for nearly two months.

"They wanted to talk about it," Hillman said — and in particular, make clear that it would have no impact on the "hundreds and hundreds" of bilateral collaborations that routinely happen between the two countries.  

"They were the ones who reached out to us, to make sure that we understood that this wasn't about affecting the way in which those projects take place."

Discussions ensued all through June, including an "explicit assurance" that the order would not inhibit any Canadian role in the commercialization or manufacture of innovations emerging from those partnerships, she added. 

"They made that very clear to us, and were very comfortable with us reiterating that publicly," Hillman said. 

"They also said the White House would work with our government as the EO was implemented, just to ensure that this strong relationship and these sort of assurances that they've given to us are not diminished." 

It wasn't always thus: veterans of Canada's diplomatic corps in Washington have long quietly grumbled that over the decades, getting the White House to consider their interests often felt like a Sisyphean task. 

Clearly, a lot has changed since early 2021, when Biden signed the death knell of the controversial Keystone XL pipeline on Day 1 of his presidency with only a couple of days' notice. 

"This particular scenario is that they explicitly thought about us as they were developing this particular policy," Hillman said. "I do think that's slightly different."

It's a testament to the ongoing outreach work of the embassy, and may also be a tangible symptom of the goodwill and bonhomie that was on visible display in March when Biden finally paid his long-awaited visit to Ottawa. 

But things could well be about to change again, at least if Donald Trump has anything to say about it. 

"Our country is being plundered," the former president wrote in a letter last week to the Wall Street Journal, a rebuttal of sorts to an editorial decrying his vow to impose a 10 per cent tariff on all foreign imports. 

Such a measure would, in his words, "stop this hemorrhaging of America's lifeblood," help restore the country's reputation as a "manufacturing powerhouse" and send a clear message to the rest of the world.  

"The tariff is an important tool of U.S. national security and diplomacy," he wrote. "I am proud to be the only candidate for president who believes in true economic nationalism."

Trump has also made clear that if elected, he intends to run riot over Biden's climate change strategy, in particular the hard pivot towards electric vehicles — a key element of the current administration's strategy in which Canada has a major stake. 

He has been emphasizing that opposition all week, hoping to capitalize on the growing prospect of a long and difficult strike in the U.S. auto sector and undercut Biden's efforts to curry favour with organized labour. 

"The only acceptable policy for (United Auto Workers) members should be the complete and total repeal of Biden's catastrophic EV mandate," he said in a statement Thursday.

Meanwhile, despite his escalating legal troubles, polls suggest Trump is running away with the race to be the Republican presidential nominee, and that Americans are less enthusiastic than ever about voting for the 80-year-old Biden.

Enter Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly, who broke with customary diplomatic protocol shortly after Trump detailed his tariff plans when she hinted at Canada's "game plan" should he get re-elected next year. 

She offered few details. But from where Hillman sits, it's less about drawing up a new strategy than it is about picking up the tempo of the current one. 

Across the U.S., the embassy has long sought to identify those people who are in positions of political power or likely to ascend to them, as well as the operatives from whom those people are likely taking advice, she said.

"We map that out across the country all the time," Hillman said. "We are doing it in relation to the issues that matter to Canada that are relevant for any particular individual lawmaker or potential lawmaker across the country."

The conversations invariably turn on a myriad of issues of mutual interest to both countries, from supply chains to critical minerals, energy security to tackling the fentanyl crisis, clean water to climate change. 

The idea is to establish a "baseline of understanding," as well as a relationship, regardless of any local or national election outcome, so there's always a foundation to work from, Hillman said. 

"Our job is to understand who we need to talk to, and understand what we need to talk to them about," she said. 

"The only way to establish that baseline of understanding is just never stop, never stop giving those messages and talking to those people. Because you can't do it six months before the election." 

 

MORE International ARTICLES

Indian from Singapore survives car crash in Japan, loses wife & kid

Indian from Singapore survives car crash in Japan, loses wife & kid
Karthik Balasubramanian, 44, who was vacationing in Japan with family, lost his wife Lin, 41, and their daughter Aahana in the fatal accident that occured on January 10. He returned to Singapore on Wednesday along with his three year-old daughter who survived the crash.

Indian from Singapore survives car crash in Japan, loses wife & kid

Indian-British Sikh Army officer Preet Chandi, aka 'Polar Preet' breaks world record for the longest, solo, unsupported, and unassisted polar expedition by a woman

Indian-British Sikh Army officer Preet Chandi, aka 'Polar Preet' breaks world record for the longest, solo, unsupported, and unassisted polar expedition by a woman
Indian-origin British Sikh Army officer Preet Chandi, who made history by trekking to the South Pole, has broken the world record for the longest, solo, unsupported, and unassisted polar expedition by any woman in history. 

Indian-British Sikh Army officer Preet Chandi, aka 'Polar Preet' breaks world record for the longest, solo, unsupported, and unassisted polar expedition by a woman

'Prominent' Indian-American charged with defrauding community members

'Prominent' Indian-American charged with defrauding community members
A Federal prosecutor has charged a "prominent" Indian-American of using his standing in the community to rip off others in a real estate scam that promised high rates of returns. Michael Easley, the federal prosecutor for eastern North Carolina, announced on Tuesday that Kumar Arun Neppalli, 56, has been charged with defrauding 12 people.

'Prominent' Indian-American charged with defrauding community members

Sikh sentenced for smashing window with hockey stick in UK

Sikh sentenced for smashing window with hockey stick in UK
The court heard that on September 7 last year, Singh smashed a window in De Montfort House, Leicester city centre, with a hockey stick after getting a warning note on his car asking him not to park in the wrong spot.

Sikh sentenced for smashing window with hockey stick in UK

Nepal plane crash: Kin fail to identify 4 UP victims among charred bodies

Nepal plane crash: Kin fail to identify 4 UP victims among charred bodies
Five Indians, including the four from Ghazipur and one from Bihar, were on board the Yeti Airlines ATR 72 aircraft which crashed in Pokhara on January 15. The four Ghazipur victims on the ill-fated plane include -- Sonu Jaiswal, 35, Abhishek Kushwaha, 25, Vishal Sharma, 22, and Anil Kumar Rajbhar, 27.

Nepal plane crash: Kin fail to identify 4 UP victims among charred bodies

New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern to step down next month after 6 yrs in power

New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern to step down next month after 6 yrs in power
Ardern, who became the youngest female head of government in the world when she was elected Prime Minister in 2017 at the age of 37, said that the six "challenging" years in the job had taken a toll.

New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern to step down next month after 6 yrs in power