The News (New Glasgow)

Canada-US relations at a low after Trudeau-Trump trade tiff

- BY ROB GILLIES AND DAVID CRARY

For the first time in decades, one of the world’s most durable and amicable alliances faces serious strain as Canadians — widely considered some of the nicest, politest people on Earth — absorb Donald Trump’s insults against their prime minister and attacks on their country’s trade policies.

Some Canadians are urging Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to seek peace with the U.S. president. Many others want him to hang tough even as Trump seeks to make political hay with his anti-Canada rhetoric.

But there’s broad agreement with this assessment by The Globe and Mail, a leading Canadian newspaper: “Relations between two of the world’s closest allies are now at a perilous low.”

The spark for the confrontat­ion: not only did Trump suggest new tariffs against Canada are justified on grounds of national security, but he and top aides assailed Trudeau as a “weak” and dishonest“back-stabber who deserves a place in hell. For Canadians — who don’t totally reject their stereotype­d image as self-effacing and nice — the eruption seemed completely at odds with their own national temperamen­t.

Anne Marie Goetz, a Canadian who teaches global affairs at New York University, said she hopes her compatriot­s will show “maturity and forbearanc­e” amid the tensions.

“But as these kinds of absurd statements and rude outbursts pile up, antagonism and resentment might too, which would be terribly unfortunat­e and even surreal for two of the best neighbours on the planet,” Goetz said.

Resentment already is palpable. A popular Alberta-based travel and culture blogger, Mike Morrison, said he and his wife have cancelled a trip to the U.S. next month. In Halton Hills, a Toronto suburb, the City Council unanimousl­y passed a motion Monday encouragin­g its residents and businesses, with typical Canadian politesse, to consider avoiding U.S. goods “where Canadian substitute­s are reasonably available.”

“Trump is like a bad houseguest. He showed up late, left early and insulted the host,” said Mayor Rick Bonnette. “When you have a bully like Trump, you can’t just keep taking it and taking it.”

The ties between the two countries are without parallel anywhere in the world. Trade between the U.S. and Canada totalled an estimated $673.9 billion in 2017, with a surplus of $8.4 billion for the United States.

Each day, about 400,000 people cross the world’s longest internatio­nal border. There is close co-operation on defence, border security and law enforcemen­t, and a vast overlap in culture, traditions and pastimes.

As with most intimate relationsh­ips, there have been rough spots.

Limited trade wars over lumber, pulp and paper, and other products have flared on and off for decades. In the early 1960s, there was a bitter rift because of personal enmity between President John F. Kennedy and Prime Minister John Diefenbake­r, who balked at U.S. pressure to be more aggressive in Cold War manoeuvrin­gs.

Later, the Vietnam War caused some divisions, as Canadians — including Justin Trudeau’s father, then-Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau — welcomed American draft evaders who crossed the border. And some Canadians, notably the Ontario intelligen­tsia, tend to regard Americans as more crass and gun-happy than people north of the border.

“In general, Canadians have looked at us as a large, powerful, unruly but basically good child — a big animal that they don’t have to worry about but does stupid things now and then,” said Stephen Blank, an American academic who has taught at universiti­es on both sides of the border.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the G7 summit in Charlevoix on June 8.
AP PHOTO U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the G7 summit in Charlevoix on June 8.

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