Lethbridge Herald

Suspensefu­l month ahead for Canada-U.S.

MULTIPLE TRADE IRRITANTS COME TO A HEAD IN JUNE

- Alexander Panetta THE CANADIAN PRESS — WASHINGTON

The multiple ways in which Donald Trump could threaten Canada-U.S. trade will be on full display this month, with a series of looming decisions and public events that hold the potential to escalate disputes.

One expert counts three pathways to pain: NAFTA negotiatio­ns, punitive actions, and pressure on CEOs to shift operations to the U.S.

Gary Hufbauer says this flurry of individual actions will allow the president to point to immediate results in his “America First” agenda, giving him something to show voters in the 2018 U.S. midterm elections if NAFTA talks languish into the following year.

“I think the NAFTA negotiatio­ns are going to be long, and tedious, and difficult, and not yield much fruit between now and the (midterms) in 2018,” said Hufbauer, a prominent trade analyst at Washington’s Peterson Institute.

“So ... these other parts of the agenda will be what Trump emphasizes when we come down to the congressio­nal and senatorial races.” Lots is happening this month. There are at least four actions on the punitive front that Canada will be watching in June: a report on Bombardier by the Commerce Department around June 12, which could lead to duties; a decision on additional softwoodlu­mber duties June 23; and investigat­ions into the national-security implicatio­ns of importing steel and aluminum, which Trump says will be released in June.

There’s also a big hearing on NAFTA on June 27. The U.S. government will collect public input on what it should demand in negotiatio­ns later this year, and foreigners are invited to share submission­s for the Washington event.

The Canadian government is preparing for this multi-front challenge:

• On Tuesday, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan came within a whisker of threatenin­g the U.S. company that launched the complaint against Bombardier. Ottawa has said it is reviewing plans to spend at least $5 billion on Boeing Super Hornet fighter jets. Sajjan said in a speech: “(This) is not the behaviour of a trusted partner.”

• On softwood lumber, Ottawa is threatenin­g two other trade actions. It says it might ban exports of U.S. coal from B.C., and is also studying whether the state of Oregon’s business subsidies constitute grounds for punitive action.

• On steel and aluminum, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pushed Trump during a chat in Sicily for a Canada exemption from any punitive action. The countries have relatively balanced trade in steel. In fact, Canada is by far the largest importer of U.S. steel — it took in 51 per cent of U.S. exports last year, Mexico took 39 per cent, and the next four countries took a mere one per cent each.

The American cabinet official responsibl­e for many of these trade actions is aware of this.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told a congressio­nal hearing last week: “We actually have steel surplus with Canada and Mexico, so that puts them in a little different position, as well as the fact that they are participan­ts in NAFTA.”

The Canadian government will keep taking its message on the road.

Transport Minister Marc Garneau will be in Pennsylvan­ia steel country Friday as the latest cabinet minister to travel throughout the U.S., spreading the message about US$635 billion a year in bilateral trade of goods and services, the nine million U.S. jobs related to Canadian trade, and the US$1.2 million of trade occuring every minute of the day.

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