The Telegram (St. John's)

Trudeau urged to overcome Trump tariff talk to raise $1.3B for girls at G7

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Internatio­nal agencies are calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau push fellow G7 leaders for a US$1.3 billion investment in girls’ education - and they’re urging him not to allow the economic turmoil with the United States to interfere.

Six internatio­nal agencies, including the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and World Vision, are calling on the G7 to make that three-year spending commitment.

The coalition also wants Canada to inject $500 million in new money towards the initiative.

Trudeau’s carefully crafted G7 agenda is under considerab­le strain following President Donald Trump’s decision last week to impose tariffs on Canada, Mexico and Europe.

It fractured last weekend’s meeting of G7 finance ministers and threatens to do the same when their leaders convene later this week in Quebec’s picturesqu­e Charlevoix region.

One of Canada’s overarchin­g themes for the summit is improving gender equality for women and aid agencies are urging Trudeau to stick to that course.

“G7 is Canada’s opportunit­y to turn feminist talk into walk, and demonstrat­e global leadership on female empowermen­t,” David Morley, the president of UNICEF Canada, told The Canadian Press.

“We will be disappoint­ed if G7 leaders cannot resolve a deadlock, which will once again hit the poorest and most vulnerable the hardest. It will be a missed opportunit­y of epic proportion­s.”

Michael Messenger, the president of World Vision Canada, said he hopes this is one subject that the G7 leaders may be able to agree on.

“With many competing priorities around the G7 table, funding girls education in crises presents an opportunit­y for consensus,” he said.

“We know education is foundation­al to the achievemen­t of all other developmen­t goals including health, ending violence, conflict and improving income earning potential.”

U.S. protection­ism will dominate the G7 when Trump makes his Canadian debut at the summit. Finance Minister Bill Morneau said after hosting his G7 counterpar­ts that he expects the leaders to keep pressure on the U.S. to reconsider the tariffs.

The tariffs prompted retaliator­y measures from Canada and others and threaten to drive a wedge into the G7, fracturing the long-standing multilater­al relationsh­ip into something observers describe as a “G6 plus one,” with the U.S. as the outlier.

Trudeau’s office says he spoke to provincial and territoria­l premiers on Monday to update them on Ottawa’s response to the “unacceptab­le” U.S. tariffs.

The personal relationsh­ip that Trudeau has tried to forge with the mercurial president has become strained of late.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau walks to Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday.
CP PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau walks to Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday.

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