The Borneo Post

Trump and Trudeau: What will happen at first tete-a-tete?

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WASHINGTON: Donald Trump is to host Justin Trudeau at the White House in what is a delicate visit for the Canadian prime minister, who hopes to get a compromise from the US president on free trade while making his point on immigratio­n.

Trudeau will be the third foreign leader received by the Republican billionair­e since he took office on January 20, following meetings with Britain’s Theresa May and Japan’s Shinzo Abe.

The pair will meet in the late morning and over lunch, with a joint press conference set for 2pm (1900 GMT).

The 45-year-old Canadian prime minister has pledged to speak ‘ frankly and respectful­ly’ with the new occupant of the White House.

“Canada will always stay true to the values that have made us this extraordin­ary country, a place of openness,” Trudeau said Friday in Yellowknif­e, the capital of the country’s Northwest Territorie­s.

The economic ties between America and its northern neighbor, who share the world’s longest common border, run deep: three- quarters of Canada’s exports go to the US, and Canada is the top destinatio­n for exports from about 30 US states.

Trump has vowed to renegotiat­e or scrap the North American Free Trade Agreement ( NAFTA) between Canada, the United States and Mexico. But any such renegotiat­ion will not be simple.

Trudeau, a fervent supporter of free trade, has emphasized the importance of the tripartite pact for his country’s economy and warned against protection­ism.

On Friday, he recalled “the fact that millions of good jobs on both sides of our border depend on the smooth flow of goods and services across the border.”

Trump has not been specific on how he wants the talks to develop, but has repeatedly trashed the 23-year- old pact, calling it a ‘catastroph­e’ for American jobs and threatenin­g to slap tariffs on imports from Mexico.

Trump and Trudeau are a study in contrasts: their path to power, their political stripes, their style – they could not be more different.

Trudeau – who has not hidden his affection for Barack Obama, and his left-leaning positions – is 25 years younger than the 70-yearold US leader.

Welcomed with great fanfare to Washington nearly a year ago by Obama, Trudeau hailed the Democratic president’s ‘leadership’ on climate change.

But it’s clear he will find a quite different take on the issue from Trump, who counts several climate skeptics in his inner circle and seems determined to undo large parts of his predecesso­r’s legacy.

So far, Trudeau has not commented directly on Trump’s controvers­ial immigratio­n order – which temporaril­y bans all refugees and travellers from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the US.

But he made his stance clear in a tweet posted the day after Trump signed his decree late last month. — AFP

 ??  ?? A woman carries an effigy of US President Donald Trump during a march to protest against Trump’s proposed border wall and to call for unity, in Mexico City, Mexico. — Reuters photo
A woman carries an effigy of US President Donald Trump during a march to protest against Trump’s proposed border wall and to call for unity, in Mexico City, Mexico. — Reuters photo

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