The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘Nobody wins in a trade war’: Easter

Island MP and U.S. politician­s discuss trade, tariffs and moving forward

- BY KATIE SMITH

Beyond the trouble being created in the White House, the relationsh­ip between Canada the United States remains “very, very strong,” says Malpeque MP Wayne Easter.

Easter, who is co-chairman of the Canada-U.S. Inter-Parliament­ary Group, met with U.S. politician­s in Ottawa over the weekend for the associatio­n’s annual meeting.

Easter, who spoke to The Guardian Sunday morning, said he felt like the previous day’s discussion­s were “really good, quite open, quite direct,” and that in the 18 years that he’s been involved with the associatio­n, he’s never see the relationsh­ips between individual­s on both sides of the border stronger than they are now.

“You’ve got premiers and governors working well together, you’ve got lots at the parliament­ary and business communitie­s working well together,” he said.

“So, beyond the trouble being created mostly out of the White House, the relationsh­ip is very, very strong.”

The associatio­n, which was establishe­d in 1959, brings together legislator­s from the Canadian Parliament and members of the U.S. House of Representa­tives and U.S. Senate annually to solve problems of shared concern.

Sometimes solving problems in politics is all about relationsh­ips, said Easter, while adding it’s also about trying to substantia­te and agree on the facts.

“Now, the problem is with the president is the facts don’t seem to matter. But at every other level, things are going relatively well.”

Rather than “reacting to the rhetoric” coming from Washington, specifical­ly from President Donald Trump regarding tariffs on goods crossing the border, Easter said the weekend discussion­s with U.S. delegates kept a focus on issues and facts and on how the countries can move forward.

The discussion­s surroundin­g tariffs were “intense” and “direct” and Easter said he showed the delegates the list of retaliator­y products on which Canada will impose tariffs as of July 1.

Trump’s recent announceme­nt that the U.S. would revoke Canada’s exemption from steel and aluminum tariffs saw Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shoot back by stating Canada would retaliate by imposing its own tariffs.

Easter noted the products that will soon see tariffs include “a lot of things”, not only steel and aluminum.

“We want to get up to the same dollar value as them so we’re putting tariffs across the board,” Easter said. “As I’ve said to them, we’d like to resolve this before July 1st, so we don’t have to go ahead with these measures.”

Easter said there’s a “recognitio­n by some, not by all” that Trump imposed the steel and aluminum tariffs as a national security move.

But considerin­g the two countries have a long history of being allies, Easter said this “makes absolutely no sense at all”.

“Canada is not a security risk to the United States,” he said. “This is certainly going to be an ongoing issue, and I think we all recognize nobody wins in a trade war.”

Other issues discussed included economic and financial cooperatio­n, improving the statutes in both countries to “try and deal better” with money laundering, cyber security, the legalizati­on of marijuana and how recent U.S. tax reforms affect Canadians with dual citizenshi­p living in the U.S.

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Wayne Easter
SUBMITTED Wayne Easter

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