Ottawa Citizen

Canada mining data to buoy NAFTA pitch

Ottawa seeks to highlight benefits to U.S.

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

The federal government is using a deep mine of digital data to map out what it says are the economic benefits to the United States of its unfettered trade with Canada, says Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland.

Freeland told an audience in Mexico City on Tuesday that the government’s trove of data drills down into individual U.S. congressio­nal districts to show the local upside of the trading relationsh­ip with Canada.

The data is all part of the Liberal government’s fullcourt press on the Trump administra­tion to demonstrat­e the benefits of the North American Free Trade Agreement. President Donald Trump has savaged NAFTA and threatened to scrap the three-country trade pact if it can’t be renegotiat­ed to his satisfacti­on.

Canada, in response, has mounted an informatio­n campaign on Trump and his cabinet, as well as Congress and state and local government­s to underline the mutually beneficial trade between the countries.

The Trudeau government has repeated, almost endlessly, the talking point that 35 U.S. states call Canada their top customer, while nine million Americans depend on Canada for their jobs.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has also assigned 11 cabinet ministers to key U.S. states to make the case for NAFTA and thinning borders.

Freeland added a new set of numbers to illustrate the government’s work on that front during a daylong conference of politician­s and business leaders in Mexico City.

She said that since Trump’s January inaugurati­on, there have been 235 meetings between Canadian and U.S. government officials; 110 Canadian political visits to the U.S; high-level meetings with Trump and 13 of his cabinet secretarie­s.

Canadians have also met 115 members of Congress and 35 state governors or lieutenant-governors, she added.

“If you’re an American official or legislator, it’s been hard to avoid a Canadian. Everywhere they turn, we try to be there,” said Freeland.

The message was the same every time, she said: that Canada and the U.S. enjoy a balanced and mutually beneficial relationsh­ip.

“We have a lot of numbers to back that up. We’ve broken it down to specific congressio­nal districts,” she said.

Freeland recalled a meeting she had with Paul Ryan, Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, in which she apparently dazzled him with data about his Wisconsin district.

“I told him that his district did a billion dollars of trade with Canada. And he was shocked. He said, ‘just mine? A billion dollars of exports?’

“I said, ‘yes Speaker, that’s right.’”

Mexican Foreign Affairs Secretary Luis Videgaray said Mexico has been mounting a similar political offensive in Washington that has resulted in “countless” meetings with American counterpar­ts.

But unlike Canada, he said Mexico isn’t actually counting the number of meetings, adding: “that would be a good practice, we should start counting how many.”

Freeland chimed in, saying: “I have a spreadshee­t in my office, Luis.”

Despite the emphasis on the U.S., Freeland reassured the Mexicans that Canada is committed to a three-way renegotiat­ion of NAFTA.

She downplayed any suggestion the NAFTA renegotiat­ion might lead Canada to do a side deal with a hardbargai­ning Trump administra­tion — something Mexico doesn’t want.

She said it is simply common sense that the 23-yearold agreement is “modernized” by all three members.

“We don’t even feel this is a contentiou­s issue. It’s just a matter of common sense. NAFTA can be modernized only with the agreement of the three parties.”

IF YOU’RE AN AMERICAN OFFICIAL ... IT’S BEEN HARD TO AVOID A CANADIAN.

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