National Post (National Edition)

Bigger than Trump or Trudeau

- JIM DEMINT AND MICHEL KELLY-GAGNON Jim DeMint, formerly a U.S. senator and congressma­n, is president of The Heritage Foundation, and Michel KellyGagno­n is president of the Montreal Economic Institute.

With Inaugurati­on Day just around the corner, it is important to remember that every new administra­tion brings changes.

The incoming U.S. president has expressed skepticism about several internatio­nal trade deals, including NAFTA. That’s worrying to many Canadians. A poll conducted last November found that 57 per cent of Canadians think the pact has made their economy better off (versus just 20 per cent who say it is worse off ).

There is also the open question of how well this new Republican administra­tion and the Republican­controlled Congress will get along with Canada’s still-young Liberal government. At least on the surface, President-elect Donald Trump and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau seem to be very different from one another.

Yet there is cause to believe that the two countries on either side of the world’s longest border will remain close in the coming years. Whatever difficulti­es threaten to strain relations — and there are always some — should be weathered reasonably well.

Take the issue of NAFTA. While there are understand­able fears regarding the prospect of reopening this trade deal, there is also the real possibilit­y that doing so could lead to more free trade between our countries, not less. Contentiou­s issues — like Canada’s supply management for dairy and poultry, or U.S. tariffs on Canadian softwood lumber — might actually get resolved to the benefit of consumers on both sides of the border.

Furthermor­e, Mr. Trump favours easier trade with Canada on at least one specific point: approval of the Keystone XL pipeline. Connecting Hardisty, Alta. to Steele City, Neb., the 1,897-kilometre pipeline drilling and fracking have allowed U.S. oil and natural gas producers to tap previously unreachabl­e domestic resources, leading to a substantia­l drop in total oil imports. Neverthele­ss, Canada remains the top foreign oil supplier to the U.S. In fact, imports from Canada are up, thanks to the displaceme­nt of imports from other countries, the addition of new pipeline capacity, and more U.S. refinery space for heavy oils from Western Canada. In 2015, 40 per cent of all oil imported by the U.S. came from its peaceful northern neighbour.

Although Mexico is set to overtake Canada this year as the No. 2 exporter of goods when our leaders and government­s have hailed from opposite sides of the political spectrum.

Through decade after decade of peaceful co-existence, the United States and Canada have been reliable allies in an uncertain world. They have fought side by side, too, to defend freedom around the world. Our nations’ closeness derives from proximity, to be sure, and from a shared history as well. But more profoundly, what binds the two allies are shared values. Whatever our difference­s in this regard, they have always been far outweighed by our commonalit­ies.

Our two countries have long been beacons of freedom and progress in a world that still cannot take these for granted. Our two organizati­ons, the Heritage Foundation and the Montreal Economic Institute, have always championed these core values. And we are confident, given all of the above, that the new administra­tion in D.C. will work to uphold them as well, and to maintain the close relationsh­ip that persists between the land of the free to the south and the true north, strong and free.

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