Windsor Star

Canada, EU hail CETA pact as ‘new standard’ in trade

Vote clears key hurdle for agreement, seen as countermea­sure to isolationi­sm

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D The Canadian Press, with files from The Associated Press

OTTAWA Lawmakers in Canada and Europe are hailing Wednesday’s approval of the Canada-EU free trade deal by the European Parliament as a win for the values of openness in the face of anti-trade movements, including the Donald Trump administra­tion.

The legislatur­e in Strasbourg, France, approved the Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement by a margin of 408-254, with 33 abstention­s. The vote clears a major hurdle for the deal that saw its first round of bargaining almost eight years ago and has had to overcome mounting anti-trade populism in Europe.

Canada’s Parliament is also expected to ratify the deal in the coming months, which means 90 per cent of it would come into force under provisiona­l applicatio­n — a key procedural step that allows the deal to take effect without the ratificati­on of the European Union’s 28 member countries and numerous regional government­s.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was en route to France to deliver his own pro-trade message in an address Thursday to the European Parliament, a first for a Canadian leader, and to top business leaders a day later in Germany.

On his way into a caucus meeting earlier Wednesday, Trudeau sang the praises of the deal as evidence of the merits of globalizat­ion.

“I think it’s an illustrati­on that when you put forward a progressiv­e trade deal that takes into account the responsibi­lity of government­s to create good middle-class jobs, create inclusive growth — not just for a few, but for everyone — (and) that focuses on the middle class, we can move forward on globalizat­ion.”

Internatio­nal Trade Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne, who was already in Strasbourg ahead of the vote, called it “the right deal at the right time.”

“Good for workers, consumers and a new standard for trade.”

EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom took direct aim at anti-globalizat­ion forces in remarks to Parliament, in what appeared to be a thinly veiled rebuttal to Trump’s protection­ist and anti-immigratio­n policies.

“With Canada we share the democratic values of tolerance and openness. We co-operate in tackling common challenges such as migration, sustainabl­e developmen­t, climate change and terrorism,” Malmstrom said.

CETA, as well as its companion strategic partnershi­p agreement, would strengthen not only Canada-EU economic relations but our “geopolitic­al alliance ... making that partnershi­p deeper and more powerful, reaffirmin­g our fundamenta­l values, political principles, and using them to shape globalizat­ion.”

The deal will help each side “serve its citizens” in the 21st century, Malmstrom added.

Former prime minister Stephen Harper, whose government opened the long negotiatio­ns that led to the agreement, welcomed the European vote with a tweet: “Pleased to finally see the Europeans ratify our CETA free-trade deal,” he wrote. “Good news for Canada and the Canadian economy.”

The Conference Board of Canada called the agreement good for both sides, since economic history demonstrat­es that greater free movement of goods, services and people is a catalyst for economic growth.

“Amid worries of U.S. protection­ism, the opportunit­ies CETA creates provide a shining example that internatio­nal trade is not a zero-sum game,” said Craig Alexander, the board’s chief economist.

Trudeau will bolster the merits of “the progressiv­e trade agenda” when he speaks to EU lawmakers on Thursday, Champagne said. “Canada is in a unique position to show that trade is good for people and I think we’re going to make that case across the world.”

Politician­s need to do more to sell the merits to free trade to an increasing­ly skeptical public, but the deal will also sell itself once it is fully ratified, he added. “When people see in practice what it means for them, I would think that over time people will see the benefits.”

Critics of the deal “may be philosophi­cally driven, just being against any trade,” he noted.

Case in point: Maude Barlow, chair of the Council of Canadians and an ardent free-trade critic, said groups such as hers would continue to oppose the deal.

“European opposition to CETA is strong and 38 national and regional parliament­s still have to ratify the deal,” Barlow said in a statement. “Referendum­s, legal challenges, elections and other obstacles still stand in the way of implementa­tion.”

CETA was nearly killed last October when the regional government in Belgium’s Wallonia region almost vetoed the deal.

Another anti-trade group, the Corporate Europe Observator­y, called Wednesday’s vote a sad day for democracy.

“The mobilizati­on against CETA has been one of the strongest European democracy movements ever,” the group’s trade policy campaigner Lora Verheecke said in a statement.

“A glimmer of hope now comes from the many national and regional parliament­s across all of the EU that still have to ratify CETA. Each one of them can bring it to a halt.”

I think it’s an illustrati­on that when you put forward a progressiv­e trade deal ... we can move forward on globalizat­ion. PRIME MINISTER JUSTIN TRUDEAU

 ?? FREDERICK FLORIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Members of the European Parliament gave the green light to the Canada-EU Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement in Strasbourg, France, on Wednesday. Canada’s Parliament is also expected to ratify the deal in the coming months.
FREDERICK FLORIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Members of the European Parliament gave the green light to the Canada-EU Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement in Strasbourg, France, on Wednesday. Canada’s Parliament is also expected to ratify the deal in the coming months.
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