Cape Breton Post

Canada, allies expect Biden to re-engage U.S.

- AMRAN ABOCAR STEVE SCHERER

OTTAWA — Canada and other U.S. allies are looking to President-elect Joe Biden to re-engage with the world on such issues as climate change and free trade, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a Reuters Next interview aired on Thursday.

The Liberal prime minister also said the U.S. electoral system and its institutio­ns had held up following last week’s violent attack on the U.S. Capitol by what he called “a small, angry mob.”

“There is a need for a re-engaged United States in global circles,” said Trudeau, who took office more than five years ago. Biden, who defeated U.S. President Donald Trump in a November election, will be sworn in on Wednesday.

“One of the things that a lot of the traditiona­l allies and friends of the United States are looking forward to is a reengageme­nt on some of the big themes, whether it’s freer trade, climate change, protecting democracy or co-ordinating against some of the rise of authoritar­ianism we’re seeing around the world,” he said.

Trump often clashed with traditiona­l allies on trade. He imposed tariffs on Canadian aluminum and steel and paralyzed the World Trade Organizati­on’s role as global arbiter on trade by blocking appointmen­ts to its appeals panel.

On climate, Trump withdrew from the Paris Agreement that set up a global framework to reduce carbon emissions, and he seemed more at ease with leaders like Russian President Vladimir Putin than with NATO allies, whom he berated for not spending enough on their armed forces.

“We’re seeing a world that is changing rapidly. The rise of a much more assertive and sometimes problemati­c China, the shifts in poles of power around the world, the rise and strengthen­ing of Asia as an economic focal point. These are things that are needing to be responded to,” Trudeau said.

Last week, Trudeau said Trump and other U.S. politician­s had incited the violence on Washington’s Capitol Hill.

“The democratic principles and the structures around (the U.S.) electoral process will not be stopped or disrupted by a small, angry mob, however disconcert­ing and alarming that can be,” he told Reuters in reference to an FBI warning of armed protests before Biden’s Jan. 20 inaugurati­on.

Trudeau said he aims to meet Biden soon after the inaugurati­on, with climate change high on his agenda.

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