Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Premiers Bound For Washington To Celebrate USMCA, Beat Back Protectionism

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2020 09:41 PM

    WASHINGTON - A delegation of premiers will be in Washington this weekend to buttress cross-border business ties with their American counterparts, hedging their bets at the dawn of a new and uncertain era of managed North American trade.

     

    Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, this year's chairman of the Council of the Federation, will lead a group of provincial leaders that includes Ontario Premier Doug Ford, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, Quebec's Francois Legault and Blaine Higgs, the premier of New Brunswick.

     

    The premiers are taking part in the winter meeting of the National Governors Association, a three-day gathering beginning Friday where Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, chairman of the association this year, is billing his ongoing "Infrastructure: Foundation for Success" initiative as a centrepiece. Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland will also be there for meetings with U.S. officials on the margins of the conference.

     

    Part of the group's mission is to extend Canada's gratitude for the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, the new North American trade pact that President Donald Trump signed into law last week that is awaiting ratification in the House of Commons.

     

    But the other part will be a pre-emptive effort against a cyclical trade barrier that's threatening a comeback in the age of the USMCA: Buy American, the protectionist element last resurrected by Barack Obama in a 2009 stimulus package designed to help the country dig out from the Great Recession.

     

    "We can't afford to stand back and wait," Ford told an audience of business leaders last week in Toronto as he teased the Ontario government's plans for a new trade agreement with Ohio aimed at improving access to markets and contracts.

     

    Ohio alone represents about $2.5 billion in procurement opportunities, he added.

     

    "We're taking action because Buy American policies are hurting Ontario businesses and workers. We've been working with the federal government to ensure Canada is exempt from Buy American provisions at the federal level. Now we're working on a made-in-Ontario solution that enables us to stand up for Ontario workers and businesses."

     

    Bloomberg News reported Tuesday that the White House is kicking the tires on a plan to pull out of a $1.7-trillion procurement agreement with members of the World Trade Organization, including Canada. The so-called Agreement on Government Procurement, like the old NAFTA, gives would-be Canadian bidders preferential access to government contracts. Those provisions were excluded from USMCA.

     

    Buy American has been an ever-present problem for companies in Canada even with the World Trade Organization agreement, said Dan Ujczo, an international trade lawyer with Dickinson Wright in Columbus, Ohio. In other cases, such as defence contracts, there are self-standing agreements that remain intact, he added.

     

    "However, the key is to have U.S. companies that rely on Canadian products in their supply chains to advocate," Ujczo said.

     

    "We did this during the Obama stimulus. It's deja vu all over again."

     

    Mark Agnew, director of international affairs for the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said a U.S. pullout from the agreement would be "problematic," given the fact that procurement is not covered by the USMCA. Whether or not Trump is serious remains an open question, but "given he has followed through on some threats, our view is to not dismiss it out of hand."

     

    New trade agreements notwithstanding, protectionist sentiment remains on the rise, Moe acknowledged Wednesday, making it critical to continue to engage with key trading partners on issues both within and outside the USMCA, such as the ever-present softwood lumber dispute.

     

    "This is all the more reason for us — as the province of Saskatchewan and, I would say, as a nation of Canada — that we need to continue to engage with our markets," he said.

     

    "For Saskatchewan, that's over 150 countries around the world; 55 per cent of our product does go to the U.S. All the more reason for us to be on the ground in those particular areas of interest."

     

    The push to get the USMCA across the parliamentary finish line in Canada saw Prime Minister Justin Trudeau make a plea Thursday morning to the mayors of the country's biggest cities, asking them to lean on Conservative MPs to get the deal ratified.

     

    "There are certain messages that could be passed to some parties that might be playing some challenging games around delaying NAFTA," Trudeau said at the start of the meeting, when reporters were allowed into the room.

     

    "So those of you who can pass along messages to some of the Conservative MPs who you work with, that would be appreciated."

     

    Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson, who chairs the big-city mayors group for the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, told Trudeau the group is "solidly with you" on ratifying the new free trade deal.

     

    "It's too important to our businesses and workers in our communities and mayors have worked with your government too hard for there to be any delays or any partisan nonsense with respect to the rapid adoption of NAFTA," he said.

     

    This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 6, 2020.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Inuit Women In Canada's North Encountering 'Racialized Policing,' Report Says

    Inuit Women In Canada's North Encountering 'Racialized Policing,' Report Says
    OTTAWA - A national organization representing Inuit women in Canada is calling for a radical shift in the way police work is done in the North, as a report to be released Thursday has uncovered "systemic racialized policing" in the Arctic.    

    Inuit Women In Canada's North Encountering 'Racialized Policing,' Report Says

    Sen. Mike Duffy Begins Appeal Of Ruling Blocking Him From Suing Senate

    Sen. Mike Duffy Begins Appeal Of Ruling Blocking Him From Suing Senate
    TORONTO - Sen. Mike Duffy has begun his appeal of a ruling that bars him from suing the Senate.    

    Sen. Mike Duffy Begins Appeal Of Ruling Blocking Him From Suing Senate

    Feds Working On New Policies To Stop Illegal Shipments Of Garbage

    Feds Working On New Policies To Stop Illegal Shipments Of Garbage
    Canada spent $1.14 million in June 2019 to bring 69 shipping containers filled trash to a waste-to-energy facility near Vancouver, ending a six-year diplomatic row with the Philippines.

    Feds Working On New Policies To Stop Illegal Shipments Of Garbage

    Stephen Harper Says Farewell To Party Post, But Says Will Stay Connected

    Stephen Harper Says Farewell To Party Post, But Says Will Stay Connected
    OTTAWA - Former prime minister Stephen Harper has left his role with the chief fundraising arm of the federal Conservative party, but says he still intends to play a role with the party itself.

    Stephen Harper Says Farewell To Party Post, But Says Will Stay Connected

    B.C. Court Rules In Favour Of Dad Seeking Power To Immunize His Children

    SALMON ARM, B.C. - A judge says the father of two boys has the right to ensure his children receive necessary immunizations and dental treatments, despite objections from the children's mother.    

    B.C. Court Rules In Favour Of Dad Seeking Power To Immunize His Children

    Surrey Mayor Calling For Ban On Single-Use Plastic Bags

    Surrey Mayor Calling For Ban On Single-Use Plastic Bags
    115,000 tonnes of organic waste is diverted annually from the landfill as a result of Surrey Biofuel.

    Surrey Mayor Calling For Ban On Single-Use Plastic Bags