Marin Independent Journal

Biden praises Canada, Mexico as leaders discuss strains

- By Aamer Madhani, Rob Gillies, and Maria Verza

WASHINGTON >> Reviving three-way North American summitry after a five-year break, President Joe Biden on Thursday joined with the leaders of Canada and Mexico to declare their nations can work together and prove “democracie­s can deliver” even as they sort out difference­s on key issues.

But as Biden, along with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, spoke of their mutual respect, the three leaders also found themselves dealing with fresh strains on trade, immigratio­n, climate change and other matters.

“We can meet all the challenges if we just take the time to speak to one another, by working together,” said Biden, who hosted the North American neighbors for what had been a nearannual tradition in the decade before President Donald Trump came to office.

It was a day of full-on diplomacy that required careful choreograp­hy as Trudeau and Lopez Obrador each met separately with Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris before gathering for a three-way conversati­on in the East Room that featured a language mix of English, French and Spanish.

As they played up the closeness of the alliance, points of tension were also clear.

They include difference­s between Washington and Ottawa over proposed tax incentives that would benefit U.S. electric car auto manufactur­ers, frustratio­n from López Obrador that the U.S. isn’t moving to issue more temporary work visas even as American businesses complain they suffer from a worker shortage, and disappoint­ment by the U.S. and Canada that Mexico is not moving faster to address climate change.

Biden met first with Trudeau, calling the U.S.-Canada relationsh­ip one of the easiest in the early going of his presidency.

But as they sat down for talks, the president also confirmed their difference­s over proposed electric vehicle tax incentives in his massive social services and climate bill.

“We’re going to talk about that,” Biden said. “It hasn’t even passed yet in the House.”

The provision in Biden’s proposed spending plan would offer American consumers a $7,500 tax credit if they buy electric vehicles through 2026. The following year, only purchases of electric vehicles made in the U.S. would qualify for the credit. The base credit would go up by $4,500 if the vehicle was made at a U.S. plant that operates under a union-negotiated collective bargaining agreement.

Canadian Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland on Wednesday called the incentive a clear violation of an updated trade agreement among the three countries that aimed to protect U.S. jobs and products made in North America.

The union provision has also sparked pushback from some non-union shops and U.S. lawmakers. Still, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said that Biden “is pretty committed to the bill providing good-paying union jobs.”

Trump had an icy relationsh­ip with López Obrador’s predecesso­r, pressing Enrique Peña Nieto to never publicly say that Mexico wouldn’t pay for a southern U.S. border wall.

But López Obrador appeared to reach a one-issue understand­ing with Trump: Mexico slowed the flow of Central American migrants trying to reach the U.S. border, and Trump often appeared to turn a blind eye to just about every other facet in the complicate­d relationsh­ip.

López Obrador offered warm words for Biden when they appeared before the cameras Thursday. The two leaders discussed Mexico’s relations with the U.S. under Abraham Lincoln and Franklin D. Roosevelt before the portraits of both that Biden has displayed prominentl­y in the Oval Office.

The Mexican president praised Biden for treating his government with respect, something he noted has not always been a given in the two countries’ long history and for including funding in his spending bill to overhaul the immigratio­n system. But he also alluded to his desire to see the U.S. move quickly on temporary visas.

López Obrador has mentioned on multiple occasions his interest in the U.S. government expanding its work visa program so more Mexicans and Central Americans can fill the demand for labor in the U.S. The temporary workers in turn could have access to the higher pay they seek in the U.S. without becoming part of the illegal immigratio­n flow.

“Why not study the workforce demand and open the migratory flow in an orderly manner?” López Obrador said.

Thursday’s meetings at the White House marked the first trilateral get-together for North American leaders since a June 2016 gathering of Trudeau, Barack Obama and Enrique Peña Nieto in Ottawa. The tradition of three-way meetings started when George W. Bush played host to Mexico’s Vicente Fox and Canada’s Paul Martin in 2005 at his ranch in Texas.

Mexico’s priorities heading into the summit were to obtain concrete advances on immigratio­n and more equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines.

The U.S. and Canada have expressed frustratio­n that López Obrador has failed to get on board with global efforts to curb climate emissions. The Mexican president skipped this month’s U.N. climate summit in Glasgow and has accused elite nations of demonstrat­ing “hypocrisy” when it comes to environmen­talism.

Trudeau and Biden were also expected to discuss the future of an oil pipeline that crosses part of the Great Lakes and is the subject of rising tension over whether it should be shut down. Biden is caught in a battle over Enbridge’s Line 5, a key segment of a pipeline network that carries Canadian oil across the U.S. Midwest.

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat and Biden ally, has demanded closure of the 68-year-old line because of the potential for a catastroph­ic rupture along a 4-mile section (6.4 kilometers) in the Straits of Mackinac, which connects Lake Huron and Lake Michigan. The Biden administra­tion has not taken a position but is under increasing pressure to do so.

Canada last month invoked a 1977 treaty that guarantees the unimpeded transit of oil between the two nations.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador speaks during a meeting with President Joe Biden in Washington on Thursday.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador speaks during a meeting with President Joe Biden in Washington on Thursday.
 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden meets with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on Thursday.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden meets with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on Thursday.

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