Penticton Herald

Governors, premiers meet

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STOWE, Vt. — Some governors from the northeast U.S. and premiers from eastern Canada on Monday called for the end of the trade war between the U.S. and Canada and a successful renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement as they gathered in Vermont for an annual meeting.

Despite the dispute between Washington and Ottawa, participan­ts in the 42nd meeting of the New England Governors and Eastern Canadian Premiers said the co-operative ties between those states and provinces remain strong.

The conference at the Stowe Mountain ski resort came as the U.S., Canada and Mexico are renegotiat­ing NAFTA. The group heard from experts in energy storage, electric vehicle innovation and NAFTA and tariffs.

Three of the region’s six governors attended. New Hampshire and Rhode Island sent other officials and Maine’s governor didn’t attend.

A major takeaway from the meeting was that “the Mexican-U.S.Canadian trading block as a participan­t on the global stage ... is far more influentia­l and powerful together than it is apart,” for Massachuse­tts Gov. Charlie Baker. “And I would hope that people would recognize and understand that renewing the current agreement among these three players will make them all better among themselves but also make them a much more significan­t and important player in global trade discussion­s.”

At the end of the day, the cochairs of the conference, Republican Gov. Phil Scott and New Brunswick Premier Brian Gallant signed a resolution concerning NAFTA and the benefits of cross border trade. In it, the governors and premiers acknowledg­ed the economic interdepen­dence across the region and contributi­on of crossborde­r trade to their states’ and provinces’ economic prosperity.

While the region has had a longstandi­ng co-operative relationsh­ip and bonds among the leaders, concerns about the trade dispute hung over the meeting.

“We are now facing a situation where we we’re dealing with tariffs and counter tariffs. It’s to nobody’s advantage,” said Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard.

Scott said he didn’t believe trade wars worked. “I think it leads to isolation among our countries and especially the way it’s being done right now, the retaliatio­n on both sides, obviously leads to relationsh­ip damage and nothing you can fix in a matter of a couple of years he said. “It takes a long time.”

After a June meeting of the Group of Seven in Charlevoix, Quebec, Trump called Trudeau “dishonest” and “weak.” Then White House trade adviser Peter Navarro asserted Trudeau “deserves a special place in hell” for attempting to “stab (Trump) in the back.” Navarro later apologized.

The U.S.-imposed tariffs on Canadian steel are already being felt in the region, officials said.

Trump’s rhetoric has made the relationsh­ip between the U.S. and Canada more fragile, said Couillard.

“We’ve been allies, we’ve been neighbours, we’ve fought wars together ... We didn’t expect that type of relationsh­ip from our friend, ally and neighbour,” he said.

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