Calgary Herald

Trump’s ‘absurd’ steel tariffs encroach on agenda

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

WHISTLER, B.C. The Trump administra­tion’s “absurd” tariffs on steel and aluminum sent protection­ism rocketing to the top of Bill Morneau’s G7 agenda Thursday as he and his fellow finance ministers from the exclusive club of rich countries braced for the inevitable economic impact.

With his pre-selected program shoved aside, Morneau made it clear the discussion­s in British Columbia’s Coast Mountains will have little choice but to focus on U.S. President Donald Trump’s widely denounced trade offensive against Canada and other G7 allies.

The American move — which prompted retaliator­y measures from Canada and others — threatens to drive a powerful wedge into the G7, and could fracture the long-standing multilater­al relationsh­ip into something observers describe as a “G6 plus one,” with the U.S. as the outlier.

This week’s three-day pre-G7 gathering, which got underway Thursday, will “absolutely ” now be focused on trade, thanks to a U.S. tactic that’s widely seen as the death knell for jobs on both sides of the CanadaU.S. border.

“We think it’s absurd that Canada is considered in any way a security risk, so that will be very clearly stated by me,” Morneau said of the U.S. decision to justify the tariffs based on national security. “I have every expectatio­n that our other allies around the table will express the same sentiment.”

Morneau said he expects the G7 to keep pressure on the U.S., hoping to force it to reconsider — and he fully expects the effort to continue at next week’s leaders’ summit in Quebec’s Charlevoix region. The summit will be Trump’s first visit to Canada as president.

In addition to Canada and the U.S., the other G7 countries are Japan, the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Germany.

The Whistler meetings will also give Morneau and other G7 ministers an opportunit­y to hold face-toface discussion­s with U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, with whom Morneau was scheduled to hold a 30-minute bilateral meeting late Thursday.

He spoke of his “strong ” relationsh­ip with Mnuchin, but even friends have disagreeme­nts, he noted. “When we face challenges, we can’t get through them without talking,” said Morneau, who attended Mnuchin’s wedding last year. On Thursday, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Canada would levy tariff “countermea­sures” of its own on up to $16.6 billion worth of imports of steel, aluminum and other products from the U.S.

 ??  ?? Bill Morneau
Bill Morneau

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