Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Belgian Deputy PM Says A Trudeau Meeting With Royals Would Have Been Nice

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2018 03:08 PM
  • Belgian Deputy PM Says A Trudeau Meeting With Royals Would Have Been Nice
OTTAWA — High-ranking Belgian officials played down a perceived snub of the Belgian king and queen by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as the royal couple carried on day two of their week-long state visit to Canada.
 
A meeting between Trudeau and the royal couple would have been preferred, Belgium's deputy prime minister said in an interview Tuesday.
 
"It's all the time better to have contact with the prime minister," Didier Reynders said.
 
But Reynders, who is also Belgium's foreign and European affairs minister, said he understood that Trudeau is dealing with more pressing political concerns: namely, showing support for his country's steel and aluminum industries.
 
Trudeau launched a cross-country tour of steel and aluminum mills this week in light of potential tariffs on the metals being imposed by the U.S. government, even though Canada and Mexico were granted a temporary exemption from the tariffs last week by President Donald Trump.
 
"It's a choice," Reynders said of Trudeau's decision to immerse himself in meetings with steel and aluminum producers.
 
 
"We have full respect for such a choice."
 
A government source, who was not authorized to speak publicly and requested anonymity, said Belgian officials were told well in advance of the planned visit by King Philippe and Queen Mathilde that Trudeau would likely be unavailable to meet with them this week.
 
But that message was relayed before the prime minister planned his outreach tour of cities that could be impacted by tariffs.
 
What was more important for Belgium this week, said Reynders, was that Canada's International Trade Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne was available to discuss trade issues with Belgian political and industrial leaders.
 
"Of course we'd prefer also to discuss with the prime minister," said Reynders.
 
"As a politician, I fully understand that this may be a priority to be very close to the workers and very close to the different people in the steel industry and in aluminum than to organize a contact during a state visit."
 
Several other federal cabinet ministers have greeted the royals so far; among them Treasury Board President Scott Brison and Veterans Affairs Minister Seamus O'Regan, who was at Gov. Gen. Julie Payette's side as she officially welcomed the couple Monday at Rideau Hall.
 
King Philippe spoke Tuesday at the University of Ottawa where he also met with students and academics before attending a First World War commemoration, where a cannon from the war that was gifted to Belgium in 1919 was put on display at the Canadian War Museum.
 
Trudeau, meanwhile, was in Hamilton, Ont., visiting the city's two largest steel producers in a show of solidarity with workers as the Liberal government also worked back channels to ensure that Trump's threat of tariffs doesn't become a reality.
 
Trump has tied Canada's exemption from the tariffs to a successful and speedy conclusion to negotiations to modernize the North American Free Trade Agreement.
 
On Monday, Trudeau visited aluminum facilities in Quebec, but also spoke with President Trump by telephone about the NAFTA talks and the potential threat to impose tariffs.
 
The White House said Trump emphasized on that call "the importance of quickly concluding the ongoing NAFTA negotiation" while Trudeau said he warned that slapping tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum would only serve to harm the NAFTA talks and would run counter to Trumps stated goals of saving American jobs and lifting the U.S. economy.
 
Reynders said the unfolding tariff spat, which still threatens European industries, is a reminder of the importance of diversifying relations with countries, including Canada, where governments are more open to co-operative trade.
 
He cited the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, known as CETA, between Canada and the European Union, as a clear example of how countries and regions can mutually benefit from opening their doors to freer market access.
 
Belgium is among the roughly 20 countries that have yet to ratify CETA, but that process could be completed by as early as the end of this year, Reynders predicted.
 
It wasn't too long ago that Canada was paying much attention to Belgium as it worked to overcome resistance to CETA by the European country's Wallonia region, which held out the threat of vetoing the pact before it was eventually signed in October 2016.
 
The Walloons were backed at the time by anti-trade activists in opposing CETA's investor-state dispute settlement mechanism.
 
 
But a change of government in Wallonia last year was expected to nullify any further resistance to ratification, Reynders suggested.
 
"It's (no longer) a problem to implement and ratify the entire document," he said, save for a European court ruling expected soon on investor provisions of the agreement.

MORE National ARTICLES

Coquitlam Police Seek Victims Of Man Who Dated Women, Stole Their Cash

Coquitlam Police Seek Victims Of Man Who Dated Women, Stole Their Cash
COQUITLAM, B.C. — Fraud and theft charges have been laid against a 37-year-old British Columbia man accused of swindling money from people he met through online dating sites and dating referral services.

Coquitlam Police Seek Victims Of Man Who Dated Women, Stole Their Cash

$1.7M Award For B.C. Couple After Malicious Prosecution By Canada Revenue Agency

$1.7M Award For B.C. Couple After Malicious Prosecution By Canada Revenue Agency
A Vancouver Island couple has been awarded nearly $1.7 million in damages after a judge criticized the Canada Revenue Agency for the "ruination" of their business and personal lives by "high-handed

$1.7M Award For B.C. Couple After Malicious Prosecution By Canada Revenue Agency

Teenage Girl Dead After Collision Between Semi And School Bus

Teenage Girl Dead After Collision Between Semi And School Bus
REDWATER, Alta. — A teenage girl died Wednesday after a collision between a school bus and a semi truck north of Edmonton.

Teenage Girl Dead After Collision Between Semi And School Bus

Canadian Man Pleads Guilty To U.S. Terror Charges In Alleged Murder Conspiracy

Canadian Man Pleads Guilty To U.S. Terror Charges In Alleged Murder Conspiracy
An Edmonton man pleaded guilty Tuesday to U.S. charges that he sent money and provided long-distance support to Tunisian jihadists believed responsible for a 2009 suicide attack in Iraq that killed five American soldiers.

Canadian Man Pleads Guilty To U.S. Terror Charges In Alleged Murder Conspiracy

Event Was Cancelled: Woman Charged After Threat To Nudist Swim At Calgary Pool

Event Was Cancelled: Woman Charged After Threat To Nudist Swim At Calgary Pool
A woman has been charged in relation to a threat made over a nudist swim at a Calgary public swimming pool that was cancelled due to security concerns.

Event Was Cancelled: Woman Charged After Threat To Nudist Swim At Calgary Pool

Study Says B.C. Women More Stressed By Finances Than Women Elsewhere In Canada

Study Says B.C. Women More Stressed By Finances Than Women Elsewhere In Canada
A new report from Canada's largest community credit union says more than half of women in British Columbia experience "extreme emotional stress" when considering their financial situation.

Study Says B.C. Women More Stressed By Finances Than Women Elsewhere In Canada