Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trump, Trade And Immigration Raised In Conservative Leadership Debate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2016 12:24 PM
    SASKATOON — Conservative leadership candidate Kellie Leitch says she's not endorsing U.S. president-elect Donald Trump, but says they share ideas on immigration.
     
    Leitch said in the first party leadership debate Wednesday night that only one in 10 people coming to Canada sees a trained immigration officer, and reiterated her controversial proposal that everyone should be screened for "Canadian values."
     
    "There are a few things that Mr. Trump and I actually have in common, whether that be supporting a Keystone pipeline or whether that be screening," Leitch said after the debate.
     
    "I want to have a working relationship with him and that will allow me then to have some tough talk with him about NAFTA and making sure that we have an open trade relationship with the United States."
     
    On Facebook and in emails to supporters, Leitch hailed Trump's election win as an "exciting message that needs to be delivered in Canada as well."
     
    Fellow MP Maxime Bernier took aim at Leitch, saying Canada was built by immigrants.
     
    "I'm running for the Conservative Party of Canada and maybe Ms. Leitch she's thinking that she's running for the Republican Party, I don't know," Bernier said to reporters after the debate in Saskatoon.
     
    MP Deepak Obhrai, who is an immigrant, said Trump's comments on immigration, which include a proposal to build a wall along the Mexican border and saying Muslims should be barred from entering the U.S., have no place in Canada.
     
    Canadian values are evolving and not set values, he told reporters after the debate.
     
     
    "Anybody can decide and design what a Canadian value is and when you give that power to the bureaucrats ... I am not willing to think that is the right approach for this country and I can tell you that I would fight for that as not being something that Canada should be doing, because remember all of us are subsequent waves of immigrants coming into this country," said Obhrai.
     
    Leitch floated the screening idea earlier this year and has not backed off it despite criticism both inside and outside her party.
     
    The 12 people vying to lead the federal Conservative Party also took jabs at the Trudeau government's proposed carbon tax and backed the idea of pipelines in their first leadership debate.
     
    "It is economic madness to impose a new tax on Canada's economy. It's economic madness when other countries around the world are abandoning the idea of a carbon tax. We need to fight this," said MP Andrew Scheer, who represents a Saskatchewan riding.
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau plans to charge $10 per tonne of carbon starting in 2018 and increasing it to $50 by 2022. Trudeau also warned that carbon pricing will be imposed on provinces that don't implement the tax or bring in a cap-and-trade system.
     
    Trudeau promised all revenue generated by a carbon tax would flow back to the province or territory from which it came. Provinces can decide how to spend that money.
     
    Everyone said they support free trade.
     
    But there are also concerns about Trump wanting to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and ditch the TransPacific Partnership (TPP), a massive free-trade proposal involving Canada and 11 other nations.
     
    MP Brad Trost said: "I think we had to be part of the TPP, but the TPP is dead. It is a finished agreement."
     
    Trost said there isn't enough support in Washington for the deal.
     
    This was the first of five official party leadership debates.
     
    The Conservatives are to elect their new leader May 27.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dr. Raghbir Bains, Scholar, Community Activist and Educator, Passes Away at 80

    Dr. Raghbir Bains, Scholar, Community Activist and Educator, Passes Away at 80
    Noted South Asian pioneer, Dr. Raghbir Bains, passed away at the age of 80 in Ludhiana, Punjab after suffering from a cardiac arrest that occurred about two weeks ago. 

    Dr. Raghbir Bains, Scholar, Community Activist and Educator, Passes Away at 80

    Police Identify Man Found In Scrap Yard In Maple Ridge, B.C.

    Police Identify Man Found In Scrap Yard In Maple Ridge, B.C.
      The Integrated Homicide Investigations Team says police were called Tuesday when a body was found with signs of foul play.

    Police Identify Man Found In Scrap Yard In Maple Ridge, B.C.

    Ultra Low Cost Travel Set to ‘Take-Off in Surrey

    Ultra Low Cost Travel Set to ‘Take-Off in Surrey
    Travel Innovation Announced at Surrey Board of Trade.

    Ultra Low Cost Travel Set to ‘Take-Off in Surrey

    RCMP In Port Alberni Make Quick Arrest After Man Hurt In Early-Morning Stabbing

    RCMP In Port Alberni Make Quick Arrest After Man Hurt In Early-Morning Stabbing
    RCMP say the 51-year-old Port Alberni man was in a fast food restaurant in that city at about 7:30 a.m. Wednesday when he was repeatedly stabbed.

    RCMP In Port Alberni Make Quick Arrest After Man Hurt In Early-Morning Stabbing

    Vancouver Home Sales Plunge 38.8% Last Month, Real Estate Board Says

    Vancouver Home Sales Plunge 38.8% Last Month, Real Estate Board Says
     2,233 properties were sold in October of this year, down from the 3,646 home sales recorded in the same month last year.

    Vancouver Home Sales Plunge 38.8% Last Month, Real Estate Board Says

    Kolkata-Born Sarabjit Singh Marwah Becomes Canada's First Sikh Senator

    Kolkata-Born Sarabjit Singh Marwah Becomes Canada's First Sikh Senator
    Toronto-based Marwah, who retired as from Scotiabank in 2014, is among six people from Ontario who have appointed to the Senate by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. 

    Kolkata-Born Sarabjit Singh Marwah Becomes Canada's First Sikh Senator