Toronto Star

Premier Doug Ford heads to Washington to get an update on NAFTA talks,

Ford and his trade minister to get NAFTA update, stress importance of jobs in province

- KRISTIN RUSHOWY

Premier Doug Ford is heading to Washington on Wednesday to talk trade.

He and Economic Developmen­t and Trade Minister Jim Wilson will meet with negotiator­s to get an update on discussion­s to modernize the North American Free Trade Agreement as a Sept. 30 deadline looms.

“I’ll be accompanyi­ng the premier to Washington to talk to our negotiatin­g team — Canada’s negotiatin­g team first-hand and Ontario’s people that are there, meet with (David MacNaughto­n) Canadian ambassador to the U.S., and have a faceto-face,” Wilson told reporters Monday at Queen’s Park.

“We haven’t done that; we are usually over the phone and we think it’s time that we went down there and once again stand up for Ontario workers, Ontario jobs — protect the jobs that we have and grow jobs in the future.”

To date, NAFTA negotiatio­ns have been rocky, with key areas of disagreeme­nt remaining, in particular on access to Canada’s dairy and cultural markets, as well as how to resolve trade disputes.

The trip will take Ford and Wilson away from the province at a time when the government has been focused on its fight to cut Toronto city council.

“We’re serious about helping the feds as best we can,” said Wilson, the MPP for Simcoe-Grey, warning that “a million jobs overnight would be lost if we lost NAFTA. Nine million jobs in the States if you consider retaliator­y tariffs that might go in.” NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said, “Everybody is really quite concerned about what’s happening with NAFTA … I agree that the best thing to do is to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the federal government, and I hope that’s what’s happening here.”

Liberal MPP Mitzie Hunter (Scarboroug­h-Guildwood) said “it’s about time” Ford turned his attention to something other than Toronto council.

“We just saw the results coming out for August in terms of the job numbers — 80,000 jobs being lost in Ontario. So it’s about time that they focus on Ontario’s economy. They inherited an economy that was one of the strongest in the G7. We had a 20-year low unemployme­nt rate in this province and things are starting to not look as good.”

Ford has spoken with about 10 U.S. governors since taking office at the end of June. In her last year in office, former premier Kathleen Wynne met with about 37 to stress the importance of trade ties.

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR ?? The Washington trip will take Doug Ford away from Ontario at a time when he has been focused on cutting Toronto city council.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR The Washington trip will take Doug Ford away from Ontario at a time when he has been focused on cutting Toronto city council.

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