The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.S.-Canada trade rift sets negative tone for meeting

- By Rob Gillies and Paul Wiseman

QUEBEC CITY — When President Ronald Reagan visited Quebec three decades ago, he was so friendly with Prime Minister Brian Mulroney they sang a song together.

Expect no duets when President Donald Trump makes his first presidenti­al visit to Canada on Friday for a summit in a picturesqu­e Quebec town with the leaders of the Group of Seven wealthy democracie­s. The mood will likely be something less than harmonious.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hasn’t been shy about venting his fury with Trump for imposing tariffs on steel and aluminum imports — including Canada’s — and for justifying the protection­ist move by calling those imports a threat to U.S. national security.

Trudeau has charged that he found the tariffs “insulting” and said such tactics are hardly how two close allies and trading partners that fought side-by-side in World War II, Korea and Afghanista­n should treat one another. The Trump administra­tion has also clashed with Canada over his insistence that the 24-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement involving the United States, Canada and Mexico be written to better serve the U.S.

The prime minister had at first refrained from criticizin­g Trump, apparently in the hope that he could forge a personal relationsh­ip that might help preserve the landmark free trade deal, a forerunner of which Reagan and Mulroney negotiated. Those two leaders became fast friends and famously sang “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling” together in Quebec City in 1985.

Trudeau’s courting of Trump appeared to work for a time. The president had initially exempted Canada from the steel and aluminum tariffs in March. But Trudeau became exasperate­d and took a shot after Trump let the exemption expire last week.

“We’ll continue to make arguments based on logic and common sense,” he said, “and hope that eventually they will prevail against an administra­tion that doesn’t always align itself around

those principles.”

The prime minister had hoped to visit Washington last week to complete what he thought would be the final stages of the NAFTA renegotiat­ion. But Vice President Mike Pence called and demanded he agree to a “sunset clause” that would end NAFTA unless the three countries agreed to extend it every five years.

Trudeau refused, and he canceled the proposed visit. NAFTA talks stalled. Since then, Trump has sounded hostile at times toward Canada.

Nelson Wiseman, a professor at the University of Toronto, said he can’t recall relations between U.S. and Canada being worse. He said the G-7 meeting will appear to be six lined up against one. There has even been speculatio­n that Trump might walk out of the meetings — or even decide not to show up.

“We can never underestim­ate the president’s capability to provide theater in a scenario like this,” said Daniel Ujczo, a trade lawyer with Dickson Wright. “And it would play well in places like Ohio, where I live. It is world leaders in one of these globalist meetings, and they are ganging up on him.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 ?? President Donald Trump shakes hands with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the Oval Office last year, but their relationsh­ip has grown frosty over trade disagreeme­nts.
EVAN VUCCI / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 President Donald Trump shakes hands with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the Oval Office last year, but their relationsh­ip has grown frosty over trade disagreeme­nts.

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