Vancouver Sun

Trudeau vows to retaliate on meat labels

PM say he has $1 billion in punitive measures to deploy against the United States

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

WASHINGTON — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he’s prepared to impose retaliator­y tariffs on U.S. goods if Congress fails to repeal labelling laws that have complicate­d Canadian meat exports.

Trudeau said he’s committed to the plan for more than $1 billion in punitive measures establishe­d under the previous Conservati­ve government — unless American legislator­s move.

The years-long dispute is at a critical juncture: it could be resolved within days, or could see Canada and Mexico slap tariffs on a wide range of U.S. goods including meat, wine and frozen orange juice.

“We are putting political pressure,” Trudeau told a news conference Wednesday in Ottawa.

“We would rather not have to engage in retaliator­y measures — but we certainly will, to stand up for our farmers ...

“We’re going to work with Americans — or against them — to make sure that it happens.”

He said he brought up the issue with U.S. President Barack Obama, although the matter rests not with the White House but with legislator­s who must decide whether to scrap a labelling law at the heart of the dispute.

Trudeau emphasized that he wouldn’t allow one issue to poison the broader Canada-U.S. relationsh­ip; he had been critical of the Harper government’s tough posturing in the Keystone XL dispute.

Officials in both countries have actually been working on a special March visit to Washington, where Trudeau would be the first Canadian leader in 19 years feted at a White House state dinner.

As for the meat labels by country of origin, proponents call it a fair way of letting consumers know where their food comes from.

Opponents say it’s irrelevant to food safety — for which there are already inspection­s.

They argue that it’s just disguised protection­ism — a system that forces U.S. importers to spend extra money to separate foreign and domestic livestock, drives up the cost of imports and makes them less competitiv­e.

The World Trade Organizati­on sided this week against the U.S., allowing penalties on American products.

Canada is getting support from some powerful American corporate interests.

About 250 U.S. companies and trade associatio­ns have sent a letter to every member of the U.S. Senate, urging them to heed Canadian and Mexican concerns.

It’s signed by some of the country’s best-known companies, including Coca-Cola, Kraft and General Mills, as well as trade associatio­ns representi­ng everything from livestock producers to vineyards.

“There’s a lot of powerful U.S. paddlers joining Canada in this canoe to get repeal of COOL (country-of-origin labelling),” Gary Doer, Canada’s U.S. ambassador, said of the letter.

The letter-signers want the Senate to adopt a bill passed in the House of Representa­tives that does away with the requiremen­t that meat sold in the U.S. be labelled by country of origin.

They say one idea being floated in the Senate for a so-called voluntary system is not enough of a change to avert punitive measures. Because it wouldn’t satisfy the other countries, the letter says, U.S. products would be open to retaliatio­n for potentiall­y 18 months while the issue gets re-fought at the World Trade Organizati­on.

“The voluntary bill currently pending in the Senate suffers from the same problem as the current COOL legislatio­n — it forces segregatio­n of imported livestock to permit the use of the ‘voluntary’ label,” says the letter, sent late Monday.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The Canadian government says it could apply tariffs to U.S. goods including meat, wine and frozen orange juice if the United States doesn’t repeal COOL (country-of-origin labelling) laws on Canadian meat.
RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The Canadian government says it could apply tariffs to U.S. goods including meat, wine and frozen orange juice if the United States doesn’t repeal COOL (country-of-origin labelling) laws on Canadian meat.

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