Waterloo Region Record

Wynne reaches out to U.S. to win allies on free trade

- Jessica Smith Cross

TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne is reaching out to U.S. governors in the hopes of winning free trade allies, fearing a proposed Buy American bill in New York state could trigger a domino effect in other states.

Wynne talked trade in a phone call with Ohio Gov. John Kasich on Thursday afternoon, and is headed to Illinois on Monday to meet with business leaders and deliver the same pro-trade message to Gov. Bruce Rauner, the premier’s office told The Canadian Press.

Wynne has already met with the governors of Michigan and Vermont, and spoken with governors of Indiana, Wisconsin, Colorado, Mississipp­i, Arkansas and Tennessee.

Her outreach comes as New York state legislator­s continue a protracted debate over their state budget and Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s related New York Buy American Act, which would require all state entities to buy from American companies for all procuremen­ts greater than US$100,000.

Ontario has a government relations firm on the ground in the New York, monitoring every “twitch and movement” of the evolving situation, with plans to remain there during the state legislatur­e’s Passover/Easter recess, a senior government official said.

The conversati­on with Kasich this week was a “wide-ranging discussion” that lasted about 30 minutes, that began with trade, the government official said.

The premier’s message is always about making the case that free trade is essential for jobs in both jurisdicti­ons. The conversati­on with Kasich also touched on areas of mutual interest, including early childhood education and auto innovation, the official said.

The broader plan is for the premier to create “a network of champions and advocates” for Ontario on trade issues in the event a “wave of protection­ism” washes over the U.S., the official said.

Should a renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement occur, Ontario is hoping to have strong bilateral relationsh­ips with states and “a chorus of high-profile politician­s and other influencer­s south of the border,” who understand the importance of trade with Ontario, the official said.

New York’s Buy American legislatio­n is particular­ly concerning because it the “strongest,” “most protection­ist” such piece Ontario officials have seen and was quickly embraced by legislator­s, the official said.

That “test case,” combined with protection­ist rhetoric coming from the White House, has the Ontario government studying the severity of potential negative repercussi­ons to the province’s economy, the official said.

Wynne has said Ontario intends to seek an exemption to New York’s Buy American legislatio­n, should it pass.

The premier and Economic Developmen­t Minister Brad Duguid have used tough language with New York, and implied Ontario could respond in kind and stop buying from New York companies, should it not receive an exemption.

“This premier is building transit, and roads, and bridges, infrastruc­ture,” Duguid said last week. “We’ve got $160 billion in investment coming in the next 12 years and I expect New York companies are going to want to have access to that as well.”

On Friday, Duguid also said a U.S. wave of protection­ism could put Ontario’s economic footing at risk.

“We are one of the leading economies in North America right now in terms of growth and job creation and there’s no question that the protection­ism in the U.S. is a potential risk to the good work we’ve done to build the strong economy we have here in Ontario,” he said.

 ?? DAVE CHIDLEY, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Premier Kathleen Wynne talked trade in a phone call with Ohio Gov. John Kasich on Thursday.
DAVE CHIDLEY, THE CANADIAN PRESS Premier Kathleen Wynne talked trade in a phone call with Ohio Gov. John Kasich on Thursday.

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