The Province

Trudeau turns on charm

PM, Freeland talk future during New York visit

- JAMES MCCARTEN

NEW YORK — Canada embarked on a high-level Big Apple charm offensive of sorts Tuesday as U.S. President Donald Trump barrelled into the UN General Assembly with his trademark bombast and braggadoci­o, singing the praises of his protection­ist “America First” agenda to decidedly mixed reviews.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and lieutenant­s Chrystia Freeland and Jim Carr began their day far from the gridlock and diplomatic mayhem of Trump Day at the United Nations, choosing instead to wave the Canadian flag at an early-morning gathering of the Council on Foreign Relations.

And while the divisive U.S. president was never mentioned by name, his largerthan-life impact was ever-present Tuesday, whether in the chaotic New York traffic, the must-see-TV vibe of his General Assembly speech or in the vision spelled out by Canada’s leaders.

For the better part of the last 70 years, the United States has taken a leadership role in overseeing and managing the global world order that emerged from the ashes of the Second World War, a job for which Freeland made a point of thanking the well-heeled, baby-boomer audience.

“That was an era of clear American leadership,” Freeland said.

“Our reflection in Canada... is that we observe that Americans — and I’m talking also about regular people, the people who vote — are starting to say, ‘You know what, maybe that mantle of leadership is too heavy for us; maybe we’re not so ready to keep on doing it.”’

Much of that anxiety and insecurity stems from lingering doubt about the future, in particular how technology is hollowing out the traditiona­l job market and leaving an increasing number of people in the Western world on the outside looking in, Trudeau added.

“As leaders we have to make a decision: do we see those fears and choose to amplify them for short-term gains, or do we say, ‘We can solve this if we work together,”’ he said.

“That choice between choosing to augment insecuriti­es and amplify them, versus saying, ‘We got this together,’ is one of the starkest contrasts we can see in political discourse today.”

U.S. trade czar Robert Lighthizer spoke earlier Tuesday about how trade talks are going in light of Trudeau’s words.

“I think the U.S. would like (Canada) to be in the agreement, but there’s a still a fair amount of distance between us,” Lighthizer told a conference taking place on the fringes of the General Assembly.

For her part, Freeland was keeping close-mouthed about the state of the talks, repeating that the two sides “don’t negotiate in public.”

 ??  ?? Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland looks on as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks to the Council on Foreign Relations in New York yesterday. — THE CANADIAN PRESS
Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland looks on as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks to the Council on Foreign Relations in New York yesterday. — THE CANADIAN PRESS

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