Trump’s Canadian envoy praises Freeland
Donald Trump’s Canadian envoy is coming to the defence of Canada’s “smart” and “articulate” foreign affairs minister — one day after the U.S. president suggested he didn’t like Chrystia Freeland’s NAFTA negotiating style.
Trump told a freewheeling press conference Wednesday that the Americans don’t like Canada’s trade representative “very much,” a comment that appeared directed at Freeland, the political leader of the Canadian team renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The president’s personalized attack uncorked debate Thursday about whether Freeland brought Trump’s wrath upon herself during 13 months of delicate NAFTA talks — with her Washington speech in June and other recent appearances in which she criticized the administration’s “America First” foreign policy.
Freeland has met regularly over the last month with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer at his Washington headquarters for closed-door talks. Senior political advisers have joined them at the bargaining table, including top staffers in the Prime Minister’s Office, Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner, and the countries’ ambassadors, Canada’s David MacNaughton and his U.S. counterpart, Kelly Craft.
On Thursday, Craft offered her view of the tone inside that room.
“Ambassador Lighthizer and Minister Freeland have tremendous respect for one another. I have seen their relationship first hand over the past 10 months. And more so as they work through differences while keeping focused on the end result,” Craft told The Canadian Press.
“I also have tremendous respect for Minister Freeland.
“She’s smart, articulate, and has been a good friend since my arrival in Ottawa.”
Craft is coming up on the end of her first year as the Canadian representative of one of the most unpopular U.S. presidents, at a time when the fate of the continent’s economy hangs in the balance.
The U.S. and Mexico are poised to present the text of their bilateral trade deal today, as pressure mounts on Canada to join that pact. The U.S. Congress is pushing Canada to join the U.S.-Mexico pact by a self-imposed deadline of Sunday to allow Mexico’s current government to sign the deal before it leaves office on Dec. 1.
Cecilia Malmstrom, the European Union trade minister, also praised Freeland’s negotiating style Thursday at an event in Montreal, where she marked the first anniversary of the Canada-EU trade deal, known as CETA.
“Minister Freeland — and also her chief negotiator, her ambassador — was key in getting CETA done,” said Malmstrom.