The Prince George Citizen

Trudeau’s weak spot

- J.J. MCCULLOUGH Citizen news service

One of President Donald Trump’s darkest talents is his ability to identify an opponent’s delicate spot and stab it remorseles­sly. From his knack for condescend­ing nicknames to inviting Bill Clinton’s various accusers to the second presidenti­al debate, there’s no denying the man has a skill for knifing sensitive areas.

And now he has found Canada’s vulnerable flank: dairy tariffs.

Though Canada enjoys broadly free trade with the United States through the North American Free Trade Agreement, it has never been absolute, and the deal makes several concession­s to Canadian protection­ism and politics. Chief among them are Canada’s extraordin­arily high tariffs on American dairy products, which at last week’s Group of Seven summit in Quebec, Trump correctly identified as a “270 per cent tariff.”

As the CBC reminded, “Canada levies a tariff of 270 per cent on milk, 245 per cent on cheese and 298 per cent on butter in an effort to keep U.S. and other foreign dairy imports out.” These tariffs exist almost exclusivel­y for the benefit of the agricultur­e sector of Quebec, a province with a unique strangleho­ld on Canadian politics.

Trump has cited these “unfair” dairy tariffs again and again in rationaliz­ing his desire to retaliate economical­ly against Canada, and though one can easily question the common sense of starting a mutually destructiv­e trade war with one of the United States’ closest allies over this, it’s equally wrong to dismiss the subject of Trump’s annoyance as frivolous. Canadians certainly don’t consider it so.

The wisdom of the dairy tariffs is a source of debate and secondgues­sing in Canada, and we can’t take for granted that voters will stand foursquare behind Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as he insists that dairy protection­ism is something he’s “100 per cent” ready to defend.

Here in Vancouver, most of the dairy in my local supermarke­t is produced by dairy companies based in Quebec, some 3,400 kilometres east.

I can buy two litres of milk from the Agropur dairy cooperativ­e of Longueuil for $2.85, or get a half-litre bottle of Milk-to-Go from Saputo Inc. (Saint-Laurent, Quebec) for $2.31. Buying a pound of Agropur butter costs $4.87, while 1.5 pounds of Saputo cheddar will set me back $9.74.

These prices are, as the U.S. president might say, terrible deals. Less than an hour’s drive south, comparable products sell for half as much in the United States, which has led to the prepostero­us spectacle of cheap Canadians crossing the border on milk and cheese runs, propping up the economies of border towns.

To call this a minor triviality of Canadian life is to ignore one of the country’s highest-profile policy debates of the past half-decade. In 2012, centrist Liberal politician Martha Hall Findlay provoked the conversati­on by running for her party’s leadership on what was a mostly one-issue campaign to abolish dairy tariffs. Though ultimately unsuccessf­ul, her taboobreak­ing crusade inspired a deluge of favorable editorials that helped make “supply management” - the Canadian jargon for dairy protection­ism - a household phrase.

On the conservati­ve side, libertaria­n former cabinet minister Maxime Bernier faced cries of hypocrisy when, as minister of industry, and later foreign affairs, he was forced to endorse the tariffs. In his subsequent run for Tory leader, he atoned for past misdeeds by campaignin­g hard against supply management, calling it the work of a “cartel” forcing high prices on Canadian families “to protect 10 per cent of farmers” in the country. The fact that Bernier, a Quebecer himself, narrowly lost several Quebec ridings to rival Andrew Scheer was widely interprete­d as evidence that the dairy vote played a significan­t role in the outcome.

Support for supply management is a difficult issue to poll, largely because the Canadian public has only the dimmest awareness of the status quo. Yet judged by their actions, culture and temperamen­t, it does strain credibilit­y to believe that there exists a broad-based constituen­cy in favor of paying more for a basic staple in order to further benefit a province already widely resented for its coddling by Ottawa.

Yet this is the trade-war hill that Trudeau has chosen to die on. He has alienated the entire western half of his country through bungled oil and pipeline policies, and now his path to a second term in next year’s election seems increasing­ly tied to maintainin­g the goodwill of Quebec.

Americans do not have spotless hands when it comes to using unfair measures to protect their own sacred industries, yet it’s a myth to believe Canada has ever had much interest in running hard in the opposite direction, and embracing the sort of unqualifie­d economic integratio­n with the United States equivalent to that enjoyed among member nations of the European Union, or one American state to another.

The consequenc­es of this long-standing approach, which has always been grounded in economical­ly regressive nationalis­m and politics, will now be felt. For centuries, much of Canadian policymaki­ng has been justified on the grounds that maintainin­g sovereignt­y from the United States is the highest good.

It works fine – so long as the United States never feels the need to indulge in a bit of pompous sovereignt­y of its own.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada