National Post

Will Trudeau’s ‘dudeplomac­y’ work on The Donald?

PM WILL SEEK TO CHARM A U. S. PRESIDENT LOOKING FOR A WIN ON THE INTERNATIO­NAL STAGE

- Josh Wingrove

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will meet with Donald Trump next week as the president’s protection­ist push threatens $ 541 billion in annual trade between Canada and the U.S.

Trudeau will visit Washington on Monday, according to a statement from the prime minister’s office. The visit is expected to be a far cry from the warm state dinner thrown by Barack Obama for Trudeau a year earlier — a close relationsh­ip the prime minister later termed “dudeplomac­y.”

But Trudeau will still have to try to charm the president on a visit where thorns loom large. The U. S. pledge to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement prompted Trudeau to shuffle his cabinet to mount a wide- reaching lobbying effort to preach the gospel of Canadian trade. A Trump ally sought to reassure Canada in January that its trade ties — roughly in balance — were not the primary target, and Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland has since found a receptive ear in Washington.

Trudeau tweeted on Thursday, “Strong Canada- U. S. ties help the middle class in both our countries.”

“Monday, I’ ll meet @ realDonald­Trump in D.C. to keep working for that goal.”

The White House announced the encounter at its daily press briefing, where spokesman Sean Spicer said, “The president looks forward to a constructi­ve conversati­on in strengthen­ing the deep relationsh­ip that exists between the United States and Canada.”

The first official meeting follows weeks of back- andforth about setting a tangible agenda beyond pleasantri­es and first- encounter photo ops.

Several people familiar with the planning said uncertaint­y about the date l i ngered f or a reason — the Canadian side wanted specific results, while the American administra­tion is still busy getting its cabinet confirmed.

The scheduling drama was further fuelled by a spectacula­r public rift between Trump and the president of Mexico last month, scrubbing plans for a potential trilateral meeting of the continent’s Three Amigos.

Canada has been at pains to emphasize the nine million American jobs tied to trade with the country.

Different cabinet ministers were in Washington this week, reciting that statistic with metronomic regularity.

The latest was Finance Minister Bill Morneau. In a speech to Georgetown University, he referred to the nine million jobs; the fact that trade- related jobs pay more; and the fact that trade surpluses and deficits are fairly even in the northern half of the continent, which appears to be a priority for the Trump team.

Freeland visited the U. S. capital this week, meet- ing Secretary of state Rex Tillerson and House Speaker Paul Ryan, among others. She told reporters afterward Canada won’t shy away from a fight and is “strongly opposed” to new tariffs, but that she was “pushing on an open door” with the new administra­tion.

“What has struck me is the kind of all- hands- ondeck approach to the Trump presidency,” said Fen Hampson, professor of internatio­nal affairs at Carleton University in Ottawa.

“The message is, quite clearly, we’re going to work with this administra­tion, we’re going to work with whomever is in the White House, because it is Canada’s interest to do so.”

One prominent analyst of Canada- U. S. relations said Canada has one major advantage working for it right now: Trump could use some productive internatio­nal relationsh­ips.

“Trump is l ooking f or some victories right now,” said Laura Dawson, of Washington’s Canada Institute at the Wilson Center. “You’re not going to invite a world leader to your office in order to treat them badly. So I think they’ll be looking for an ‘ announceab­le’ that will be a mutual win for both of them.... Showing himself to have a positive relationsh­ip with Trudeau will help Trump’s image and success at home.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The first official visit between these heads of state will take place Monday in Washington, D.C., after weeks of back-and-forth planning.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS The first official visit between these heads of state will take place Monday in Washington, D.C., after weeks of back-and-forth planning.
 ?? SAUL LOEB / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ??
SAUL LOEB / AFP / GETTY IMAGES

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