Lethbridge Herald

Mulroney lends a helping hand

MULRONEY ON HIS ROLE HELPING TRUDEAU, DESPITE RIVALRY WITH DAD: ‘THAT WAS THEN’

- Alexander Panetta THE CANADIAN PRESS — WASHINGTON

In six simple words, Brian Mulroney sweeps aside the glaring irony of his new political mission: assisting a Trudeau government, an assignment that will even see him participat­e in a cabinet session.

Mulroney once spent an entire chapter of his memoirs excoriatin­g Pierre Trudeau — his personal nemesis, prime ministeria­l predecesso­r, and partisan rival. Yet his work with Trudeau’s son on the Canada-U.S. file will culminate today in a meeting with ministers on upcoming NAFTA renegotiat­ions.

“That was then, now is now,” Mulroney said in an interview last week, when he was in Washington for the annual gathering of the Horatio Alger Associatio­n as it awarded scholarshi­ps to youth with troubled background­s.

“My wife and I have been friendly with the present prime minister — as has my family — for many years. He has always treated us with great courtesy and respect. He’s the one I deal with. He sets the tone.”

The story of how Mulroney got involved in modern-day Canada-U.S. relations stretches back before the last federal election — Mulroney had known the Liberal leader since his childhood and heaped praise on him.

But it really started the morning after Donald Trump’s groundshak­ing election win.

Last Nov. 9, a group of government officials huddled to assess what had just happened, how it affected Canada, and what personal connection­s they might have to the incoming Trump team. There weren’t many. While the Liberals had multiple relationsh­ips with the Clinton team, there were scant points of contact with the political outsider who shocked the Republican party, then the world.

There was one famous exception. In a community of moneyed Florida snowbirds, Mulroney had become friendly with Trump and was especially close to his incoming point man on NAFTA, Wilbur Ross. Even the TrumpMulro­ney children had struck friendship­s.

“The name that kept coming up again and again was Prime Minister Mulroney’s,” said one person involved in the Nov. 9 talks.

“Almost everybody we called with even a tangential relationsh­ip with Trump said Mulroney was the guy to talk to.”

Mulroney has since had several phone chats with the prime minister, that source said. He’s also volunteere­d in three ways: establishi­ng connection­s, offering advice, and conveying one country’s perspectiv­e to the other.

For example, the source said, if the Americans were upset about trade deficits, Mulroney might point out to Ross how the deficit with Canada was a non-issue — largely attributab­le to swings in oil prices beyond any government’s control.

Mulroney wasn’t the only bridgebuil­der: Chrystia Freeland set up the initial meetings in New York between the Trudeau and Trump teams.

He credits everyone for making the most of these new connection­s.

“I can tell you I’ve heard from two leaders of the American administra­tion ... telling me the Canadians ... were the best and the nicest people the Americans were able to deal with anyone around the world,” he said.

“How do I know that President Trump feels that he had a very good meeting with the prime minister and he liked him a lot? ... Because he told me. At dinner ... They just hit it off ... He liked the cut of his jib. He liked the way he spoke. He liked a lot of things.”

Mulroney is equally laudatory of the opposition’s behaviour: he says Rona Ambrose and the Conservati­ves have lowered the partisan temperatur­e on a critical issue of national interest, and sent a letter offering help wherever possible.

“This is a national challenge,” Mulroney said.

“If we were ever to lose NAFTA you’d see grave challenges in Canadian society. So in something like this there’s not a Conservati­ve, or a Liberal way to look at this. There’s only a Canadian way.”

He said that example of Canadians sticking together got noticed in Washington. In comparison, U.S. politics has been riven by partisansh­ip even on touchy internatio­nal matters, like the handling of Russian meddling in the last U.S. election.

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