National Post (National Edition)

RACE TO FIND A NEW LEADER OF THE GREEN PARTY OF CANADA IS MIRED IN CONTROVERS­Y.

Poll shows Canadians against opening

- JAMES MCCARTEN

WASHINGTON • Canada and the United States are now widely expected to extend their mutual ban on non-essential cross-border travel as COVID-19 destroys U.S. President Donald Trump’s hopes for a quick end to America’s public-health nightmare.

The Canada-U.S. border has been closed to “discretion­ary” travel such as vacations and shopping trips since the pandemic took hold of the continent in mid-March, a rolling 30-day agreement that’s currently set to expire July 21.

Officials on both sides of the border who are familiar with the ongoing talks, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss matters not yet public, say another extension until late August is all but inevitable, thanks to a towering wave of new COVID-19 cases that’s swamping efforts to restore a modicum of normality in the U.S.

New York Rep. Brian Higgins, one of several members of Congress from northern border states keen to see a plan for reopening the border, expressed dismay Tuesday at news he called disappoint­ing but hardly surprising.

“With no leadership from President Trump to address the pandemic, cases in the United States are spiking and as a result U.S. citizens are not welcome in several countries around the globe, including many of our allies,” Higgins, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Recent calls from Higgins and others for a plan to start easing border restrictio­ns have been greeted with social-media scorn and derision in Canada, where recent polls make clear the idea of allowing entry to Americans any time soon is a non-starter.

The novel coronaviru­s has been particular­ly resurgent in southern states such as Florida, Texas, Georgia and

Louisiana, where businesses tried to reopen early, contrary to the advice of public health officials, and the wearing of face masks became a partisan issue.

“The U.S. and Canada should be developing a plan that lays out what continued, nuanced management of the border during a prolonged pandemic will look like,” Higgins said.

“But the administra­tion’s failure to develop a national plan for widespread testing, (personal protective equipment) distributi­on and the rejection of social distancing and mask-wearing to slow the spread doesn’t inspire confidence that such a plan is in the works.”

Wearing a mask, perhaps the simplest way to reduce the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, has evolved into one of the most complex and flummoxing points of division in the U.S., thanks in part to conflictin­g signals early in the crisis about its effectiven­ess and the obvious reluctance of the commander-in-chief to embrace the idea.

It was only just this past weekend — nearly four months into the crisis — that Trump himself was photograph­ed wearing one in public, during a visit with wounded service members at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

Dr. Robert Redfield, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, urged Americans to mask up Monday, saying facial coverings for everyone in the country would break the pandemic’s back in less than two months.

“It’s our major defence to prevent ourselves from getting this infection,” Redfield said in Charlotte, N.C. He added that if everyone wore masks for the next four to six weeks, “I think we could drive this epidemic into the ground.”

Paradoxica­lly, new online polling from Leger and the Associatio­n for Canadian Studies suggests the idea of mandatory masking in public is more popular in the U.S. than it is in Canada.

Leger’s poll, conducted July 10 to 12, found 72 per cent of 1,001 Americans supported the idea of mandatory masks indoors, compared with 67 per cent of the survey’s 1,523 Canadian participan­ts. Of those surveyed in the U.S., 41 per cent said they’d consider it a violation of their personal freedoms, compared with 27 per cent of those in Canada.

Despite Americans’ position that the mask requiremen­t is a rights infringeme­nt, they believe it should be mandatory, ACS president Jack Jedwab said.

Dr. Howard Njoo, Canada’s deputy chief public health officer, said cross-border travel in a public health emergency is usually a matter of ensuring that both countries have a similar grip on the circumstan­ces, taking into account factors like their respective healthcare systems, testing and contact-tracing regimes and strategies for preventing transmissi­on.

Given that a number of U.S. states are experienci­ng community transmissi­on of COVID-19 and don’t have the situation under control, it will likely be weeks or even months before the benefits of additional preventive steps become apparent.

“It will take some time,” Njoo said. “If I were to travel anywhere, I would stick to Canada for the time being.”

 ??  ??
 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS / HOUSE TELEVISION VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Brian Higgins, a congressma­n from New York, wants to ease restrictio­ns at the Canada-U.S. border, but acknowledg­es, “With no leadership from President Trump to address the pandemic, cases in the United States are spiking and as a result U.S. citizens are not welcome in several countries.”
THE CANADIAN PRESS / HOUSE TELEVISION VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Brian Higgins, a congressma­n from New York, wants to ease restrictio­ns at the Canada-U.S. border, but acknowledg­es, “With no leadership from President Trump to address the pandemic, cases in the United States are spiking and as a result U.S. citizens are not welcome in several countries.”
 ?? PETER J THOMPSON / NATIONAL POST FILES ?? The Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls between Canada and the United States has been a quiet place much of the
time during the coronaviru­s pandemic.
PETER J THOMPSON / NATIONAL POST FILES The Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls between Canada and the United States has been a quiet place much of the time during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada