Medicine Hat News

PM heading to U.S. before NAFTA talks

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The Canadian charm offensive in advance of NAFTA renegotiat­ions will play out at one more venue before talks begin, with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attending a gathering next week of several dozen U.S. state governors.

The prime minister will deliver a speech to more than 30 governors at the Rhode Island gathering of the National Governors Associatio­n and is expected to participat­e in less formal events like discussion forums.

This year’s annual gathering has two themes: technology and trade — and it’s the latter that will be of particular­ly pressing interest to Canada’s government.

The gathering comes just a few days before the Trump administra­tion is expected to publish its negotiatin­g positions for a new North American Free Trade Agreement — a public statement required under an agreement with Congress.

After that, negotiatio­ns are slated to begin between the U.S., Mexico and Canada in about a month.

“I am thrilled to welcome Prime Minister Trudeau to our summer meeting,” said the chair of the governors’ associatio­n, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe. “I know my fellow governors will agree that our relationsh­ip with Canada is essential to our states on key issues like trade, tourism, energy and many others.”

Trudeau’s office also put out a statement Friday, confirming his intention to deliver a keynote speech in Rhode Island on July 14. Trudeau said: “No countries share a closer bond... Ever more integrated supply chains draw our economies closer together, bringing jobs and prosperity to Canadians and Americans alike.”

Canadian officials insist the goal of this kind of outreach is not to bypass the trade-skeptical, Donald Trump-led federal government, as suggested in a recent New York Times piece on Canada-U.S. relations titled: “Canada’s Trump Strategy: Go Around Him.”

One official pointed out that Trudeau has already spoken nine or 10 times with the president, and is doing so again at this week’s G20 meeting. In addition, there will be senior Trump administra­tion officials at the Rhode Island gathering, including possibly Vice President Mike Pence.

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