National Post

Current, former PM in Washington to discuss NAFTA

Trudeau to meet Trump, Harper part of a panel

- Alexander Panetta

• In an ironic scheduling twist, the current prime minister and his predecesso­r will both be in Washington, speaking on the same day, about the same issue: the renegotiat­ion of NAFTA, which enters a highstakes phase this week.

Old political nemeses Justin Trudeau and Stephen Harper might literally cross paths. Harper is scheduled to attend a panel discussion on trade Wednesday afternoon, just as Trudeau is a few blocks away at the White House, discussing thorny trade issues with President Donald Trump.

The former Conservati­ve prime minister is at an event hosted by Dentons law firm that also features Newt Gingrich, a Trump confidant and former top U. S. lawmaker, and U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

Some people in the senior ranks of the Canadian government and at Washington’s Canadian embassy were caught off-guard by Harper’s itinerary — those contacted by The Canadian Press last week said they were unaware Harper would be there on the same day as Trudeau. One Liberal joked he’d spent enough time in his life worrying about Harper’s plans and didn’t intend to fret about them this week.

The law firm timed the event to coincide with the fourth round of NAFTA negotiatio­ns, which runs Oct. 11 to 15 in Washington and which are expected see a ratcheting up in intensity.

Trudeau lands in Washington late Tuesday and he’s expected to raise the nearly 300-per-cent duties on Bombardier planes, and duties on softwood lumber with Trump, but NAFTA will likely dominate.

The countries have encountere­d difficulti­es on simpler issues even before the NAFTA negotiatio­ns have entered anticipate­d trouble areas like car parts.

Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue, a pro-NAFTA member of Trump’s team, has expressed disappoint­ment in the progress so far.

“But we think this is the way these things get going,” Perdue said at a Washington gathering last week.

“If you’ve ever watched a boxing match they circle one another for a while. I think we’ve done circling. So we’re gonna lay some things on the table in this next round.”

Canada’s lead minister on the NAFTA file said difficult negotiatio­ns were to be expected. “This administra­tion is the most protection­ist U.S. administra­tion since the 1930s... Proudly ( so),” Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland told CTV’s Question Period over the weekend.

“That certainly poses some difficulti­es in a free trade negotiatio­n.”

Trudeau will not only be meeting with the president during his U. S. trip but also with key American l awmakers with special power over trade — including the ability to sink or save an internatio­nal agreement.

Trudeau will be on Capi t ol Hill on Wednesday morning for a rare meeting between a foreign head of government and the full gathering of the House of Representa­tives’ Ways and Means committee.

That committee and the Senate Finance committee have a unique mandate under the U. S. fast-track law to help American trade negotiator­s design U.S. positions.

They would also be responsibl­e for shepherdin­g any eventual agreement through votes in Congress.

On top of that, these committees would likely design the response from Congress if Trump tries to cancel NAFTA, which he has repeatedly threatened to do, and some legal scholars argue a full repeal requires congressio­nal approval.

Trudeau leaves Washington on Thursday for Mexico, where he meets with President Enrique Pena Nieto.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is scheduled to meet with U. S. President Donald Trump this week with the difficult NAFTA talks likely the main topic of conversati­on.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is scheduled to meet with U. S. President Donald Trump this week with the difficult NAFTA talks likely the main topic of conversati­on.
 ??  ?? Stephen Harper
Stephen Harper

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