Edmonton Journal

Canada woefully unprepared for Trump presidency

We need to cut dependency on U.S., Gordon Laxer writes

- Gordon Laxer is professor emeritus of political economy and the founding director of Parkland Institute at the University of Alberta.

Don't cosy up to a dictatoria­l neighbour. Japan and Europe have learned this lesson, but not Canada. This country is woefully unprepared for a Trump election victory in November. If elected, Trump said he will become dictator for a day. Is it his usual bluster or should we believe him?

Many assume that Trump would be as chaotic, unfocused, lazy and incompeten­t as last time. But key players from the old Republican party disagree. In his first presidency, several Trump cabinet members held office in previous government­s and believed in a U.S.-led internatio­nal order. But, according to David Frum, former speech writer for Republican president George W. Bush, that wouldn't happen with Trump's second coming. He would arrive with a much better understand­ing of the system's vulnerabil­ities, surround himself with willing enablers, retaliate against adversarie­s, and grant himself impunity.

Other Republican­s share Frum's assessment. The U.S. is “sleepwalki­ng into dictatorsh­ip in the United States,” stated Liz Cheney, former prominent Republican congresswo­man and daughter of former Republican vice-president Dick Cheney.

In his first term, Trump didn't understand what he was doing, maintained Adam Kinzinger, former Illinois Republican congressma­n. He actually listened to people around him until the end. Next time, he will put people who share his views in charge. Some are pretty smart and know how to work around the Constituti­on and the law to bring in authoritar­ian measures, Kinzinger stated.

We've gone from early overreacti­on when Trump first became president to over-complacenc­y now. What should Canada do? Heed what other democracie­s have done when faced with economic over-dependence on a neighbouri­ng dictator.

After quarrels with China over disputed islands and experienci­ng supply-chain vulnerabil­ities during COVID-19, Japan loosened economic dependence on nearby China. Europe reduced its dependence on Russian natural gas after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, despite threats to sever natural gas supplies if Europe supported Ukraine.

But Canada is not planning to reduce dependence on the U.S. if Trump wins again. Instead, Canada launched a charm offensive to convince Trump's congressio­nal allies to exempt Canada from his promised 10-per-cent worldwide tariff on imported goods.

Team Canada's refrain that U.S. trade with Canada supports many jobs in the U.S. likely won't match such a powerful appeal.

Canada is unprepared for life beside a dictator because geographic isolation long protected us from invasion and war. Canadian government­s simply assumed that the U.S. will protect us from foreign threats. But if the U.S. becomes dictatoria­l, where would that leave Canada?

Progressiv­e Canadians ignore this prospect and hope the nightmare will disappear. But instead of magical thinking, we need to prepare by reducing economic dependence on the U.S. Don't leave a cudgel for a second Trump presidency to beat Canada into submission.

Canada should prepare by becoming more economical­ly self-reliant, deepening economic and political ties with other democracie­s, and allying with American opponents of dictatorsh­ip.

How can Canada be more economical­ly self-reliant? When COVID-19 hit, president Trump banned the export of masks and other critical medical supplies. Producing vaccines and a range of health products and services in Canada are obvious places to start.

After the pandemic, supply chain shortages pushed many countries away from globalizat­ion and production shifted from just-in-time to just-in-case, where goods are stockpiled. Canada should join this shift and bring crucial industries and services back home.

Doubters of the economic feasibilit­y of such a project should look at how Canada developed impressive domestic manufactur­ing production during the Second World War. We had only 11 million people then compared to over 40 million now. With determinat­ion, why could we not do something similar today?

Even if Trump loses in November, returning production to Canada would lessen our vulnerabil­ity to future supply troubles, shield our democracy from future threats and create more manufactur­ing jobs.

Canada is not deepening economic ties with China, Russia, or North Korea. Why on earth would we do so with a Trump-run United States?

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