Lethbridge Herald

PM expands Blair’s role

BLAIR ASKED TO LEAD TALKS ON SAFE THIRD COUNTRY AGREEMENT WITH THE U.S.

- Janice Dickson THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has assigned sweeping responsibi­lities to Bill Blair, the new minister in charge of border security and organized crime, tasking him with leading the file on irregular migration and examining whether Canada should ban handguns and assault weapons.

In a freshly minted mandate letter made public Tuesday, the prime minister asks Blair to lead conversati­ons with the United States on the Safe Third Country Agreement, working closely with Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland and Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen.

The agreement stipulates that asylum seekers are required to make their refugee claims in the first “safe” country in which they arrive — meaning those who come into Canada at an official land border crossing are sent back to make their claim in the U.S.

The agreement does not cover irregular asylum seekers — those entering Canada at unofficial points, most notably in Quebec.

Blair’s work will be supported by the department­s of Public Safety, Immigratio­n and Foreign Affairs, the letter says. Blair will report to Public Safety.

Conservati­ve immigratio­n critic Michelle Rempel called Blair’s appointmen­t “an exercise in public relations, not a plan of action.”

“The letter contains no formal commitment to renegotiat­e the Safe Third Country Agreement in such a way that would close the loophole that facilitate­s the Roxham Road crossing in Quebec. This is because Justin Trudeau has no intention of doing so.”

Rempel said the Liberal government has failed to “broach” the border issue with Americans, choosing instead to throw millions of dollars at the problem.

Jenny Kwan, the NDP’s immigratio­n critic, reiterated that under Donald Trump’s leadership the U.S. is “not a safe country” and is urging the government to suspend the Safe Third Country agreement.

In addition to border responsibi­lities, Trudeau is also ordering Blair to examine a “full ban on handguns and assault weapons in Canada” while taking care not to impede the lawful use of firearms.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale told reporters in July — following a deadly shooting in Toronto that saw an 18-year-old woman and a 10-year-old girl killed and 13 others wounded — that the government is prepared to consider tightening handgun laws.

Blair will also focus his efforts on reducing the smuggling of opioids across the border, working with provinces, territorie­s and the U.S.

The Canada-U.S. relationsh­ip has surfaced in other mandate letters made public Tuesday, including issues around trade and energy.

Internatio­nal Trade Diversific­ation Minister Jim Carr is being tapped to boost trade in key markets “whether or not a trade agreement exists.”

His mandate letter tells him to focus on trade with Asia by moving the needle on trade talks with China, India, and regional pacts in the Pacific and South America. Carr is also asked to help with trade talks with the U.S.

Natural Resources Minister Amarjeet Sohi has been asked to help workers caught up in trade disputes, while simultaneo­usly working with the U.S. and Mexico on “energy security.”

Trade among provinces is the focus of Intergover­nmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc’s mandate letter. His letter emphasizes working with provinces and territorie­s to eliminate internal trade barriers, but says the work will be done with a “full exercising” of the federal government’s constituti­onal and legal rights “on the regulation of trade and commerce.”

Spending federal money faster is a key focus for new Infrastruc­ture Minister FrancoisPh­ilippe Champagne, who takes over a portfolio where slower than expected federal spending has been a constant thorn for the government.

Trudeau tells Champagne in the letter that funding budgeted for any year should only be moved to future years to make sure cash is available for ongoing projects. If funding falls short, the government will have to explain what went wrong, the letter says.

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