The Peterborough Examiner

Dutch PM tells Parliament Brexit is a ‘terrible idea’

- JANICE DICKSON

OTTAWA — Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte says Canada and the Netherland­s have a special role to play after Brexit, a decision he railed against in an address to Canada’s parliament today.

Rutte says Britain’s decision to leave the European Union is a terrible idea, adding that he imagines many Canadians feel the same.

Rutte offered his view on the ongoing Brexit negotiatio­ns during his Thursday speech to the House of Commons in which he invoked the strong bonds between the two countries forged during the Second World War.

“In Europe, we now face the great unknown of Brexit. Let me be totally honest, I still think it’s a terrible idea,” Rutte said in his speech, as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looked on.

He said the negotiatio­ns are proving complex because “it’s not so easy to unbreak the eggs that made the omelette.”

Rutte said his country needs to continue working with the United Kingdom and that it remains a key partner for the Netherland­s, and for Canada.

“Together with Canada I’m sure we will succeed in building new and even stronger bridges between both sides of the Atlantic,” he said, adding that was a topic of discussion during his private meeting with Trudeau.

Rutte praised the Comprehens­ive Economic Trade Agreement, or CETA, saying the wide-ranging free trade deal between the EU and Canada is a progressiv­e modern agreement made for the 21st century. He said it shows that trade does not have to be a “zero sum game.”

The Dutch leader said his country and Canada helped build the internatio­nal rules-based order that rose from the “ruins” of the Second World War, including NATO, the United Nations and the World Trade Organizati­on.

He said the two countries share a commitment to free and fair trade, and the ongoing effort to make global institutio­ns more relevant to people around the world feeling the ill effects of globalizat­ion. Rutte said “geopolitic­al shifts” need to be addressed.

“In the past we worked to build a better world order, and it’s true after so many years the system we built is now showing some cracks.”

Rutte thanked Canadian soldiers for their efforts in liberating the Netherland­s during the Second World War, including the more than 7,600 young men who did not survive. “They made (the) ultimate sacrifice and Netherland­s is their final resting place.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The two prime ministers held a joint press conference at Parliament.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS The two prime ministers held a joint press conference at Parliament.

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