The Daily Courier

Trump, Sanders stoked protection­ist sentiments for years: Mulroney

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OTTAWA (CP) — Canada will prevail in getting a new free trade agreement with the U.S. despite the anti-globalizat­ion bent in America which has been stoked by the left and right-wing voices there for years, former prime minister Brian Mulroney said on Friday.

The architect of the original Canada-U.S. free trade agreement was a main attraction at the Canada2020 conference in Ottawa.

Mulroney told the conference attendees both U.S. President Donald Trump and Sen. Bernie Sanders have fuelled the idea that global trade is tilted against American interests, giving rise to fear, anger and protection­ist sentiments which Canada must fight.

“When fear and anger fuel much of the public debate, history teaches us that protection­ist impulses can easily become a convenient handmaiden,” he said.

“Much of what we are witnessing today in the U.S. reflects similar emotions of fear and anger stimulated in large part by the sense that the government is dysfunctio­nal or detached from public concerns or that the global system of trade which is so important to all of our lives is tilted against American interests,” Mulroney said. “How could they not think that way with Bernie Sanders on the left and President Trump on the right telling them that for a number of years?”

Trump campaigned on renegotiat­ing or tearing up the North American Free Trade Agreement and last month served notice to Congress he intended to reopen negotiatio­ns. The new discussion­s between the U.S., Canada and Mexico are set to begin in August, to update the 23-year-old deal.

Trump has been all over the map on what he wants to see with the deal, from tearing it up entirely to just “tweaking” it. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has spent a significan­t amount of time and political capital lobbying Americans ahead of the expected negotiatio­ns, on the benefits of NAFTA and the damage that could be wrought by cutting trade between Canada and the U.S.

Mulroney said on Friday he has no official advisory role in this game, although his long relationsh­ip with Trump and other members of the administra­tion have made him a valuable commodity. In February he was dispatched to a fundraiser at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla., where he serenaded the president and sung Trudeau’s praises.

He said today he has not spoken with Trump himself recently, but spoke to senior members of the Trump White House this week.

He described a conversati­on he had recently with Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, in which Kushner said how impressed the White House was by the show of unity in Canada. The conversati­on followed a letter written by former interim Conservati­ve leader Rona Ambrose throwing her support fully behind the Liberal government’s trade negotiatio­ns.

“This is in conflict, a variance, let me put it that way, with what you see in Washington with the Congress seriously divided on everything, including this,” Mulroney said in a scrum with reporters after the speech.

Mulroney said he understand­s the anxieties created by the fast-paced changes in our world but he said it is unfair and unwise to make trade the scapegoat.

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