Times Colonist

Ottawa dead set against ‘ridiculous’ quotas for U.S. to replace steel tariffs

- JAMES McCARTEN

WASHINGTON — Canada is not about to agree to quotas or other limits on its exports in order to get the United States to lift punishing tariffs on steel and aluminum, says a source close to the ongoing talks to resolve the lingering tit-for-tat trade standoff.

Where the two sides ultimately end up remains to be seen, but the Canadian source — speaking on condition of anonymity in order to discuss sensitive negotiatio­ns — described the idea of a quota system as a non-starter and a concession that Canada is not prepared to make. “They’re trying to get us to agree to a quota system, which we’re not going to do, because it’s ridiculous,” said the source.

“They know what they need to do to get a deal. The ball is entirely in their court.”

Other sources briefed on the talks, however, say quotas are indeed on the table as the two sides work towards getting the tariffs lifted before voters in the U.S. head to the polls for pivotal midterm elections Nov. 6 that could, depending on the outcome, have ramificati­ons for the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

Donald Trump imposed the so-called Section 232 tariffs — 25 per cent on steel and 10 per cent on aluminum — back in June on national-security grounds.

But the levies, which the U.S. president has acknowledg­ed publicly helped to expedite the new North American trade deal known as USMCA, did not go away when the agreement was reached recently at the 11th hour.

Trump’s now-infamous potshots at Canada, a fixture of his rally speeches and news conference­s while the trade talks were ongoing, have largely been replaced by domestic political rhetoric as he ventures into the U.S. heartland, desperate to preserve Republican control of Congress.

But the anti-Canada commentary has not disappeare­d entirely.

In remarks to a dinner audience on Capitol Hill this week, Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow related a story in which an unidentifi­ed White House official described Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as “that punk little kid running Canada.”

And a CBC report quoted Zekelman Industries chairman and CEO Barry Zekelman — Canadian-born, but head of a U.S.based steel pipe and tube conglomera­te and unabashed champion of American steel interests — telling a Commons committee that Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland is “way out of her league.”

Carlo Dade, head of the Calgary-based Canada West Foundation, said it’s clear that there’s a degree of persistent crossborde­r animosity, particular­ly on the part of the office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive. “The USTR really does not like Canada,” Dade said. “They’ve got a hate on for us, and they’ve had a hate on for us for a long time.”

Not so, said the source, who’s convinced that it’s all part of the Trump-fuelled U.S. negotiatin­g playbook.

“It’s all pretty transparen­t — they’re doing exactly the same thing” they did during the NAFTA talks, the source said.

“They’ve got their spokespeop­le out there calling us names, and their steel people out there attacking Chrystia ... I think a lot of this is just show business.”

There is, however, a burning economic imperative: the mutually assured destructio­n of U.S. tariffs and Canadian dollar-for-dollar countermea­sures on $13-billion worth of trade, a stalemate that is making itself felt on both sides of the border.

With the midterms looming, Republican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell has been urging the White House to resolve matters sooner rather than later, given the impact that retaliator­y tariffs from Canada, Mexico, China and the EU are having in the U.S.

 ??  ?? Rolls of coiled steel are ready for shipping at Canadian steel producer Dofasco in Hamilton, Ont.
Rolls of coiled steel are ready for shipping at Canadian steel producer Dofasco in Hamilton, Ont.

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