The Welland Tribune

Wynne wields big stick against protection­ist U. S.

- DAVID REEVELY dreevely@ postmedia. com

Ontario needs a new law letting the government retaliate against American states that keep companies here from bidding on their public contracts, Premier Kathleen Wynne said Wednesday.

New York will be the first target, she said — a state where Ontario fought off wide- reaching “Buy American” restrictio­ns last year, but where a more limited law saying contractor­s have to use only American iron and steel in state- funded road and bridge projects takes effect in April.

“I have consistent­ly said that Ontario wants free and fair trade. That’s what creates the greatest number of opportunit­ies for our people,” Wynne said, via a written statement. “New York state’s Buy American law will undermine the spirit of our partnershi­p and give their workers an unfair edge. I have no choice but to respond by introducin­g legislatio­n of our own. Our U. S. partners need to know that if they choose protection­ism, they will pay a price.”

Wynne said when MPPs return to Queen’s Park in a couple of weeks, the Liberals will present them with a bill giving the government broad authority to answer rules like New York’s with ones covering Ontario’s public spending.

Ironically, Wynne announced all this on her most recent goodwill tour to the U. S.. Her Tuesday in Washington, D. C. was packed with meetings with U. S. trade diplomats, senators from Wisconsin and Michigan, and U. S. Vice- President Mike Pence’s chief policy adviser. Wednesday in New York included a roundtable on the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Wynne has made a mission out of combating President Donald Trump’s anti- trade ethos by making friends with state governors and legislator­s, hoping that when Trump gets protection­ist, they’ll speak up for the importance of free trade to their states. NAFTA has integrated the economies of Ontario and border states; raw materials and industrial goods flow back and forth across the Canada- U. S. border to the tune of billions of dollars a year.

A harder, thicker border is bad for business, but that’s a pitch that has a better chance of sticking in the White House if Trump hears it from the Republican governors of swing states like Michigan and Wisconsin instead of a liberal politician from Ontario.

So far, it’s worked. Ontario’s blandishme­nts did get that sweeping Buy American language out of New York’s budget bill. NAFTA is being renegotiat­ed, not ( yet) ripped up.

There’s always political capital to be made from uniting people against a common outside enemy. Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is doing it against British Columbia, banning imports of B. C. wine to retaliate against Premier John Horgan’s talk of restrictin­g the transporta­tion of Alberta oil through his province. Conflict can be addictive.

“Initiating a trade war with the United States is a last- ditch election ploy by Kathleen Wynne to deflect the blame for her disastrous economic policies,” responded interim Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader Vic Fedeli.

“The premier using this as a political tool to cling to power is nothing short of reckless, especially during this critical time in the

NAFTA negotiatio­ns,” said Fedeli.

In 2009, Fedeli reached out to mayors in some U. S. cities where North Bay had bought fire trucks and other civic equipment, asking them to resist a federal plan to have billions in recession- fighting infrastruc­ture work use only material bought in America. In those letters he noted what a shame it would be if North Bay had rules forbidding it to buy from U. S. suppliers.

When nicey- nice fails, having a stick helps. Otherwise you’re not bargaining, you’re begging.

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