Re The UN General Assembly Speaker Schedule is Here! I note that whoever will be speaking for Canada this year…
Canada – U.S. November 2021
Written by Diana Thebaud Nicholson // November 8, 2024 // Canada, Mexico, Trade & Tariffs, U.S. // No comments
5 September
Perrin Beatty and Fen Hampson discuss their ‘CUSMA: High Stakes, Little Time’ lead essay in the Expert Group on Canada-US Relations series
Perrin Beatty, former minister in the Clark, Mulroney and Campbell governments then CEO and president of the CBC, then Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters , and then until recently Canadian Chamber of Commerce says “if you’re running a business and you had one customer who bought about 75 or 80% of what you were selling, you would give a lot of focus to that customer and making sure that their needs were met and that they were happy doing business with you. That’s essentially the relationship between Canada and the United States today… that means (CUSMA negotiation in 2026) to be very important for us to do a great deal of preparation to make sure that Americans understand that this is important to them and not just to us, and that we’re listening to where they have concerns, that we’re responsive, and that this is a win win, that everybody feels that it’s better… For example, are there ways in which we could improve the way in which our border is functioning to reduce some of the friction at the border, to make it easier for goods and legitimate travelers to pass across? Is there infrastructure we could be building to make it easier for us to get inputs or to take our goods to the rest of the world?… we have to recognize is that whoever is in office there, and we will respect whatever decision the Americans make, whoever’s in office, these are going to be very tough negotiations. All of this means that Canada should be working very hard right now to get our act together and to prepare a common front on the part of Canada to be able to take our case to the American people.”
Fen Hampson, Chancellor’s Professor and Professor of International Affairs and former director of the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs says “we’re dealing with a very different United States from what we dealt with when we were negotiating the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement and NAFTA. The renegotiation of NAFTA, I think, gave us some sense of some of the challenges that are likely to come, whether it’s Trump administration or Harris administration. But the idea is to put some ideas on the table in a non-partisan way, and also, if they’re willing to listen, to provide ideas and suggestions to the government at both the political level, at the official level, and any of the opposition parties if they care to listen.” As to Mexico:” We can work with the Mexicans. But, you know, there are some issues, and our paper talks about it, where, you know, we’re much more closely aligned with the United States, for example, when it comes to labor, when it comes to investment in the energy sector, when it comes to environmental standards, where we’re on the same page as the Americans, and they’re going to be our ally.”
27 August
Canada’s ambassador to Washington says no reason to be ‘concerned’ by either return of Trump or Harris victory
Ambassador Kirsten Hillman was in Halifax for much of the three-day retreat, at which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet planned their fall agenda. Mr. Trudeau faces persistent domestic headwinds over his popularity and the economic mood of the country, but the U.S. election still was a strong focus each day of the meetings.
U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan addressed the ministers on Sunday, followed on Monday by Mr. Trump’s former deputy trade representative, C.J. Mahoney. On Tuesday, Ms. Hillman and former Canadian ambassadors to Washington David MacNaughton and Frank McKenna spoke to the cabinet.
Liberal cabinet set to focus on Canada-U.S. trade relations on third and final day of retreat
(Globe & Mail) Last January, faced with a looming presidential election and the real possibility of another Donald Trump presidency, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau relaunched the Team Canada strategy his government initiated during Trump’s first term.
With more than three million Canadian jobs – about one in six – reliant on exports, and three-quarters of Canadian exports going to the United States, the trade relationship with the U.S. is critical in all corners of this country.
Dubbed by some as the “maple charm offensive,” the goal of the strategy is to engage a full-court press on Canadian interests with all levels of government, as well as business and union leaders. It is led by [Industry Minister Francois-Philippe] Champagne, Trade Minister Mary Ng and Kirsten Hillman, Canada’s ambassador in Washington.
Hillman said since January the trio has visited 33 states and met with 42 governors, as well as mayors, senators, trade officials, business executives and labour groups.
On Monday night, the cabinet met with C.J. Mahoney, the former U.S. deputy trade representative who led the new NAFTA talks for the White House six years ago, and Steve Verheul, Canada’s former chief trade negotiator who led those talks for Trudeau and the Liberals.
23 August
(iPolitics Evening brief) Canadian ambassador to the U.S. Kirsten Hillman, along with two of her predecessors, are set to appear at the Liberal cabinet’s upcoming retreat in Halifax, as the government continues its preparations ahead of the U.S. presidential election.
Former ambassadors David MacNaughton and Frank McKenna will join Hillman for a session with ministers specifically dedicated to Canada-U.S. relations, iPolitics has learned.
Hillman also participated in the government’s previous cabinet retreat, held in Montreal in January, when the Liberals officially launched the ‘Team Canada’ approach to the U.S. election.
Laura Dawson, executive director of the U.S.-Canada Future Borders Coalition, as well as Janice Stein, a public policy professor at the University of Toronto, are also scheduled to participate in the session.
8 August
What Walz shares with Canada
(Politico Ottawa Playbook) There’s the deep trading relationship with what some have dubbed Canada’s 11th province. There’s his “Minnesota nice” attitude — the kind of guy who would chat you up in the Tim Hortons lineup, back when they were plentiful in his state. And the folksy governor with a humble upbringing gets along great with Ontario Premier DOUG FORD.
Former U.S. Ambassador to Canada BRUCE HEYMAN says these sorts of cultural and personal ties matter a lot, whether it’s Harris’ time growing up in Montreal or her newly minted running mate living just next door.
… “In this particular case, you have a team that knows Canada, likes Canada, maybe even loves Canada, and has a depth of experiences that every Canadian would look over and say, ‘I can be comfortable with that with my neighbor next door’ — in fact, not only comfortable, but excited to see that as a possibility.”
Not that the GOP ticket doesn’t have its own Canada ties, from the JD VANCE/JAMIL JIVANI bromance to the fact Trump’s grandfather once ran a Canadian brothel.
30 July
Derek Burney: No good news for Canada amid U.S. election convulsions
While Trump’s ‘America First’ agenda would be detrimental to Canadian interests, Harris’s trade policies may be no better
(National Post) The U.S. presidential election campaign has quickly become convulsive, unprecedented and nasty. The early debate on June 27, requested by Joe Biden, was a gamble that failed spectacularly. His devastatingly confused performance sent panic waves through Democratic ranks, ultimately obliging him to withdraw from the race and designate Vice-President Kamala Harris as his replacement.
17 June
This Conservative MP is ‘best friends’ with Trump running mate J.D. Vance
VP candidate and MP Jamil Jivani bonded over being outsiders at a top U.S. law school
Two men from disparate backgrounds who say they forged a friendship while feeling like outsiders at an elite American institution could help chart the future of the Canada-U.S. relationship.
Those men are Ohio Republican Sen. J.D. Vance — who was picked by former president Trump as his running mate on Monday — and Jamil Jivani, the Conservative MP who was elected to Parliament in a byelection earlier this year.
If their respective parties win power this year and next, the long personal history between these two political neophytes could be an asset for Canada, some politics-watchers say.
Canada’s Ambassador to the U.S. Kirsten Hillman told CBC’s Power & Politics she is “very happy” to see Trump pick Vance, someone she said is well-known at the embassy for “supporting the Canada-U.S. relationship.”
12-13 June
Second annual US-Canada Summit focuses on security and trade
The second annual US-Canada Summit, co-hosted by Eurasia Group and BMO, featured a cross-border who’s who of speakers, including former Ambassador to Canada David Jacobson, Under Secretary for Policy at the US Department of Homeland Security Robert Silvers, Delaware Sen. Chris Coons, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, and Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy. Canadian political heavyweights included the premiers of Ontario and Saskatchewan, Doug Ford and Scott Moe, as well as federal cabinet ministers Mélanie Joly and Anita Anand. UN Climate Envoy and former governor of the Bank of England Mark Carney gave the closing keynote, and the US and Canadian Ambassadors, David Cohen and Kirsten Hillman, shared the stage.
This year’s themes were the economy and security north and south of the 49th parallel. A major focus was the shift from global to regional blocs in international trade. While Eurasia Group President Ian Bremmer reassured the crowd that “Globalization is not falling apart. We are not heading to a Cold War here,” the Chairman of Cynosure Group and former Vice Chair of the Federal Reserve Randal Quarles took a more skeptical view.
Geopolitical tensions were also on the menu. Speakers touched on the wars in Ukraine and Israel, with Joly underscoring that US President Joe Biden’s proposal is “fundamental” to resolving the latter conflict. China loomed large in the conversation, with Silvers discussing how the US Department of Homeland Security is securing America’s ports by engaging Japanese firm Mitsui to replace Chinese cranes currently dominating port infrastructure
Several speakers emphasized the need for energy security, including securing the supply chain for critical minerals necessary to build EVs. According to Dunleavy, as the world order shifts from a globalist to a regionalist perspective, North America can prosper by securing both its domestic supply and transformation. Moe emphasized that “If we get our energy security, we’ll have our food security, we’ll have our national security. But it starts with energy security.”
Finally, speakers discussed the post-COVID employment landscape and the impact of AI.
American and Canadian voters yearn for something they might never get
Evan Solomon
(GZERO North) Is there a deep, secret yearning from American and Canadian voters for a radically open border? Do people really want Canada and the US to be more like the EU? OR, is border politics all about isolationism, security fears, and building walls? The results of an exclusive new poll from GZERO and Data Science will surprise you – and ought to be shaping the election campaigns in both countries.
We revealed part of the poll at the US-Canada Summit.
Why are so many people so keen to discuss the US-Canada relationship? As Bremmer said, this is a hinge moment in history, with three wars raging — one in Ukraine, one in the Middle East, and one in the United States — a remark that caused gasps and nods. On top of that, 60+ elections are reshaping the world this year (Modi humbled in India, Macron in a showdown with the far right in France, Sunak shambolically slinking off in the UK). Meanwhile, China is threatening Taiwan, and AI is grinding its way through our economies and imaginations.
Gary Cohn, former director of the National Economic Council under Trump and the vice chairman of IBM, admitted that what worries him most is the collision between geopolitics and the economy. They are inextricably linked and making things worse. With the political bombs falling so close, people are desperately looking for a safe shelter, and that shelter is the US-Canada relationship.
16 May
US and Canada strike up first critical minerals partnership
(GZERO media) [T]he US and Canada are taking their efforts to compete with Beijing underground – literally. The Pentagon on Thursday announced it would invest $15 million in two early-stage mines in Canada looking to dig for “critical minerals” that are considered essential for national security.
The Canadian government will pony up a similar amount for the project, which represents the first US-Canada tag team of its kind. The two projects will focus on cobalt and graphite, critical components in solar power batteries and other fuel cells which are at the heart of the green energy transition.
China is the world’s leading miner of graphite and dominates the global cobalt industry through its control over the sector in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the world’s largest producer.
… Governments were the only option. The mining companies weren’t able to raise money for these projects on traditional capital markets, because the prospects are at such an early stage that they can’t be proven.
14 March
Should Canada give three F’s?
Evan Solomon
(GZERO Media) For the past 17 years, Perrin Beatty has been the voice of business in Canada. And that means he cares about one key thing: the United States. After all, Beatty has long understood that for Canadian business, the biggest customer, opportunity, market, threat — you name it — has always been the United States. And Canada has been the biggest or second biggest market for the US. Beatty, who served as defense minister under Prime Minister Brian Mulroney in the late 1980s, gave me his view of what to watch for in this volatile election year and why Canada’s three F’s matter more than people think.
You’re leaving your role as president of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce after 17 years, which has been a transformative time. What is the biggest economic challenge facing Canada’s trade with the US?
Perrin: The politics of trade has undergone a sea change in the US under the last two presidents. Previous presidents, from Ronald Reagan on, viewed America’s interactions in the global economy as an opportunity to foster American prosperity, and they saw an integrated North American economy as a source of strength. More recently, however, US politicians have started to turn inward, increasingly viewing their country as a victim, and not as the primary beneficiary of international engagement. This change has led them to increasingly align themselves with domestic protectionists who want to build economic walls along the US border.
… As Canada’s relationship with the US has moved from being strategic to being transactional, American leaders are increasingly looking at each issue as a standalone, and they are making their decisions, not on what is in America’s long-term best interest, but on where they can find immediate political advantage at home.
We need to rebuild that strategic relationship. It’s vital for Canada to be seen as bringing solutions to the major problems confronting the United States, as opposed to simply pleading to be exempted from the latest punitive measure. We need to demonstrate, both in Washington and far away from it that Canada should be treated not as a problem, but as a partner.
1 March
Canada loses its Washington whisperer
Brian Mulroney, Canada’s 18th prime minister, forged Canada-U.S. trade ties and close friendships with White House leaders.
… The 18th prime minister was a fierce friend of a series of U.S. presidents. His death leaves Ottawa minus its go-to counsel as Canada braces for another bumpy ride with Donald Trump’s potential return to Washington.
Mulroney, a two-mandate Progressive Conservative prime minister, sought to forge closer ties with the U.S. and struck a close relationship with late president Ronald Reagan that was enviable to his contemporaries.
In a statement Thursday evening, Fred Ryan of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation credited the two leaders with “one of the most important periods in the history of bilateral relations between Canada and the United States.”
Mulroney understood the importance of trade to his homeland, former U.S. secretary of state James Baker wrote Thursday in The Globe and Mail. “It was, he believed, Canada’s life blood. And so, he made it his objective to strengthen Canada’s stature as a first-class world trader
23 January
Cabinet Retreat: Ministers Discuss ‘Team Canada’ Approach to U.S. Relations
(CPAC) Ministers François-Philippe Champagne (industry) and Mary Ng (international trade) speak with reporters in Montreal on the final day of the federal cabinet retreat. They are joined by Ambassador to the U.S. Kirsten Hillman.
Earlier in the day, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the two ministers would lead a ‘Team Canada’ approach to engaging with the U.S. as the country prepares for an election year that could see Donald Trump return to the White House.
2023
Thanksgiving travel disrupted after fatal bridge explosion at Niagara Falls border crossing
The airport in Buffalo shut its doors to international flights and Amtrak halted service between New York and Canada. U.S. and Canadian authorities are investigating the explosion.
The airport in Buffalo, New York, shut its doors to international flights and Amtrak halted service between New York and Canada on Wednesday, hours after a vehicle exploded at a customs checkpoint at the Canadian border nearby — throwing portions of the U.S. travel system into chaos on the eve of Thanksgiving.
The deputy airport director for the Buffalo-Niagara International Airport, Russell Stark, confirmed that the airport was closed to arriving and departing international flights, and said it was done at the request of U.S. Customs and Border Protection. A Customs spokesperson said the agency was “working closely” with the FBI and other federal, state and local authorities, but did not comment on the airport closure.
23 September
U.S. Provided Canada With Intelligence on Killing of Sikh Leader
American intelligence gave assistance, but communications intercepted by Canada were more definitive in linking India to the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
(NYT) In the aftermath of the killing, U.S. intelligence agencies offered their Canadian counterparts context that helped Canada conclude that India had been involved. Yet what appears to be the “smoking gun,” intercepted communications of Indian diplomats in Canada indicating involvement in the plot, was gathered by Canadian officials, allied officials said.
While Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken has called on India to cooperate with the Canadian investigation, American officials have largely tried to avoid triggering any diplomatic blowback from India. But the disclosure of the involvement of U.S. intelligence risks ensnaring Washington in the diplomatic battle between Canada and India at a time when it is keen to develop New Delhi as a closer partner.
19 September
Biden’s efforts to court India challenged by assassination claim
Biden has wooed India’s Modi as a counterweight to China. A claim about a Sikh killing complicates that effort.
…the president’s long-running effort to court Modi, a strategic partner key to countering China’s influence in the Indo-Pacific…is now complicated by Canada’s explosive allegation that Indian officials may have been behind the slaying of a Sikh separatist leader in British Columbia.
The White House’s approach since the allegations were made public Monday has been to walk a tightrope: Offering support for Canada’s investigation and urging India to cooperate, while avoiding any repudiation of India or Modi.
The White House has not issued a joint statement with Canada because it was a Canadian investigation, according to a senior administration official, who requested anonymity to discuss a sensitive issue. The official said it would be unusual for the United States to stand with another country when it is announcing the results of an internal law enforcement investigation, adding that the United States would not expect another country to do the same.
Canada, US worked closely on possible India link to Hardeep Singh Nijjar killing
(Reuters) – Canada worked “very closely” with the United States on intelligence that Indian agents had been potentially involved in the murder of a Sikh leader in British Columbia earlier this year, a senior Canadian government source said on Tuesday
26 June
Ottawa se dit paré pour un retour au pouvoir de Donald Trump
Retour sur les 12 derniers mois de la diplomatie canadienne avec la ministre des Affaires étrangères, Mélanie Joly
Entre autres choses, Mme Joly compte se rendre à Washington sous peu afin de rencontrer des élus républicains et démocrates. Il faut d’ores et déjà resserrer les liens avec les membres du Congrès. Elle compte aussi rencontrer des gouverneurs qui sont à la tête d’États clés.
L’idée de rétablir une sorte d’Équipe Canada regroupant les premiers ministres des provinces, les maires des grandes villes, les regroupements de gens d’affaires et les syndicats afin de défendre les intérêts du Canada auprès des Américains, comme cela a été le cas durant les quatre années tumultueuses de Donald Trump à la Maison-Blanche, est aussi envisagée.
22 June
Canada, U.S. sign deal to better co-ordinate fight against wildfires
Agreement makes it easier for firefighters to pitch in on both sides of the border
Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson and David Cohen, the U.S. ambassador to Canada, signed a memorandum of understanding Thursday meant to improve cross-border cooperation on wildfires.
While the two countries have worked together on an ad hoc basis for decades, the new deal formalizes that cooperation and makes it easier for U.S. firefighters to pitch in when Canada needs them to quell a fire, and vice-versa.
As part of the deal, there’s now a new “framework” that stipulates how firefighting resources will be exchanged between the two countries.
9 June
U.S., Canada open to a ‘NORAD-like’ model of joint disaster response: Blair
Cross-border co-operation must respect provincial responsibility, emergency preparedness minister says
(CBC) As Canada grapples with hundreds of wildfires burning across the country, Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair says the federal government is looking for ways to deepen its co-operation with the United States on disaster response.
In an interview with CBC’s The House airing Saturday, Blair said he’s spoken with the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) — America’s federal disaster response force — on how to better cooperate in responding to major natural disasters.
“We’ve been talking about even a NORAD-like approach,” he said. “Because these emergencies of wildfires, floods, earthquakes, emergencies writ large and all hazards — they’re borderless.”
10 April
What the US and Canada really want from each other
(GZERO) US President Joe Biden and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau finally had their COVID-delayed summit in March 2023. Biden and Trudeau clearly get along, and US-Canada ties are as strong as ever. Yet, some thorny issues still need to be ironed out.
The two neighbors see eye-to-eye on things like immigration or pushing back against China and Russia. But there’s friction on Haiti and especially on the US Inflation Reduction Act, whose subsidies are wooing Canadian green biz south of the border.
On GZERO World, Ian Bremmer discusses the bilateral relationship with David Cohen, the US ambassador to Canada, and Kirsten Hillman, Canada’s Ambassador in Washington. Then, Ian asks Canadian Defense Minister Anita Anand why she won’t let her kids use TikTok (amongst other pressing national security questions).
30 March
Mr. Biden Came to Canada: Takeaways from the Visit
Colin Robertson
(Policy) As presidential visits go, the nearly 30 hours that Joe Biden and Dr. Jill Biden spent in Ottawa last week was as good as it gets. And while the optics were so exuberant and the mood so jubilant that it may actually go down in history as the “Fun Summit”, the substantive takeaways attest to both the real value and practical implications of bilateral harmony.
The stagecraft — the presence of the ‘Two Michaels’, the steelworker and Ukrainian refugee in the gallery of the House of Commons — lifted a page from presidential State of the Union addresses, while the gala dinner was done with Hollywood glitz with the help of star-spangled Canadians Eugene Levy, Catherine O’Hara, Eric McCormack and Hayden Christensen.
At the dinner, Biden toasted “to family, to Canada, and to the United States” the natural segue from his speech to Parliament, declaring that that “Americans and Canadians are two people, two countries … sharing one heart.”
The leaders’ 2700-word Joint Statement covers the waterfront, validating the hours and hours that teams of officials have spent fleshing out the detailed February 2021 Roadmap for a Renewed North American Partnership.
A presidential visit has a natural forcing function with the National Security Council’s inter-agency scrutiny and a similar process on the Canadian side led by the PMO and PCO. The top-level direction is the catalyst forcing deliverables and the dollars that go with them.
29 March
Canada’s C$80B response to U.S. clean energy push: ‘We will not be left behind’
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland sells energy transition as an economic imperative.
The Canadian government has unveiled its answer to the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act with a federal budget that offers billions of dollars for investment in the transition to a low-carbon economy.
24 March
Joint Statement by President Biden and Prime Minister Trudeau
…the United States and Canada will work together to:
1. Catalyze Clean Energy and Create Good Jobs: Deepening economic integration, accelerating the deployment of clean technologies, and workforce development are essential to building a more sustainable and globally competitive economy for American and Canadian workers, including through continued implementation of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.
President Biden and Prime Minister Trudeau highlighted the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act and Canada’s Emissions Reduction Plan as foundational elements to leading the clean energy future through robust clean energy industrial policies that help mobilize technological innovation, bolster resilient supply chains, strengthen our respective economies and expand the middle class, while keeping our environment healthy for future generations. …
16 March
Biden is coming to Canada: Here’s what we know about his visit
U.S. President Joe Biden is coming to Canada Thursday evening, kicking off his short but long-awaited overnight official visit to Canada.
(CTV) During his stay in the nation’s capital, Biden will meet with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and deliver an address to Parliament on Friday. But, he and first lady of the United States Jill Biden have some other events on their itineraries, where key Canada-U.S. issues and shared priorities will be discussed.
Biden’s first “virtual” international bilateral was with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in February of 2022 when both countries were still in the throes of the COVID-19 pandemic. Since then, Biden and Trudeau have met on the sidelines of various international events, yet, there has not had a trip dedicated to the U.S.-Canada relationship.
With many layers of preparation underway—from major security precautions and an increased presence of police, including U.S. Secret Service, RCMP, and provincial and local officers, as well as military aircraft in the skies,, to extensive road closures—Biden’s brief trip will be a significant event in the cross-border relationship.
16 March
Policy primer: Wide range of topics to be discussed during Biden’s visit
Ahead of the visit, both countries are laying out a wide range of potential topics spanning from migration policy to continuing support for Ukraine.
The United States and Canada are under pressure to address the sharp increase in the level of irregular migration on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border. U.S. Customs and Border Protection reports an 846 per cent increase in irregular crossings from Canada along a section of the northeastern border. The flow of asylum seekers entering Canada from the United States has also spiked; nearly 40,000 last year, many at irregular border crossings like Roxham Road on the Quebec-Vermont border.
Another likely topic is the transition to clean energy and critical minerals. These are essential components in green technologies from solar panels to electric vehicle batteries and a potential growing source of middle-class jobs. Canada is home to nearly half of the world’s publicly listed mining and mineral exploration firms. This represents a combined market capitalization of $520 billion, according to the Canadian government’s critical mineral strategy.
It’s a long list.
“… The ongoing crisis in Haiti is also likely to come up during the talks. There are reports the Biden administration officials are pressuring Ottawa for a decision on leading a multinational force to assist the country with its battle against gang control.”
15 March
Canada’s banks are quietly picking up Silicon Valley Bank clients as U.S. sale process stalls
Sean Silcoff
Some of Canada’s largest banks are pro-actively and aggressively soliciting Silicon Valley Bank clients amid a standstill in the failed lender’s sale process.
U.S. regulators shut down California-based SVB on Friday after depositors started fleeing at a rapid pace, but hopes of a quick sale over the weekend did not pan out. With uncertainty brewing and private equity firms circling, at least three Canadian lenders are looking to pick off SVB clients.
Already some companies that banked with SVB have moved their stateside deposits to RBC.
The private manoeuvring could make any sale of SVB more challenging, because any buyer of the bank will not want the best clients and loans to disappear before a deal is completed.
The Canadian banks seem more interested in individual SVB loans and clients, rather than the whole bank, but The Globe has learned that RBC was one of several banks that looked at buying all of SVB last weekend, according to a source with knowledge of the bank’s interests. RBC held discussions and looked into SVB’s loan book, but ultimately couldn’t see a way to make the deal work, and talks did not advance, the source said.
9 March
Details of U.S. President Joe Biden’s official visit to Canada announced
U.S. President Joe Biden will be making an official visit to Canada between March 23 and 24 to meet with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and his trip to the nation’s capital will include an address to Parliament.
Details of the coming trip— Biden’s first to Canada since becoming president in January 2021—were confirmed by Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) and the White House on Thursday.
“President Biden will reaffirm the United States’ commitment to the U.S.-Canada partnership and promote our shared security, shared prosperity, and shared values,” said White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre in a statement.
10 January
Biden, López Obrador, Trudeau meet in Mexico City for summit
The centerpiece of the summit will be hours of talks with all three leaders, but Biden will start Tuesday with a bilateral meeting with Trudeau.
7 January
What it means for Canada if the new U.S. Congress can’t get anything done
(CBC radio/The House) Kirsten Hillman, Canada’s ambassador to the United States, joins host Catherine Cullen to discuss the concerns this new Congress might raise for Canada, and what’s on deck for Canada-U.S. relations in the new year.
2022
4 October
Mysterious drop in loon population prompts cross-border collaborations in North America
Loons are having fewer and smaller chicks, which are less likely to survive. Most surprisingly, young, non-breeding adults are also dramatically in decline — but no one knows why. Volunteers from Canada and the United States are on a quest for answers.
28 July
U.S. electric vehicle tax credit could spur ‘rebirth of Canada’s auto sector,’ industry representative says
Original ‘Buy American’ bill shut out Canadian automakers; new bill must still pass Congress
Canadian automakers were relieved to hear that a U.S. bill that would have seen consumer tax credits for EVs limited to U.S.-made vehicles could be expanded to North America after Democrats in the U.S. Senate reached a deal.
Canadian automakers breathed a sight of relief Thursday after U.S. lawmakers scrapped part of a massive incentive package for electric vehicles that would have excluded those assembled in Canada from a proposed consumer tax credit.
The $7,500 US credit for “clean vehicles” — which include battery-electric, plug-in hybrid and hydrogen fuel cell — is part of $369 billion in proposed new spending on energy- and climate-related projects included in the Inflation Reduction Act.
10 July
Canada needs to disaster-proof its relationship with the United States: experts
By Chelsea Nash
Former U.S. ambassador to Canada Bruce Heyman wants to see a bilateral agreement between the two countries to ‘codify’ the important parts of the relationship while Joe Biden and Justin Trudeau are both still in office.
(Hill Times) Increasing political polarization in the United States has prompted some Canada-U.S. expert observers to call for the Canadian government to prepare itself for worst-case scenarios south of the border.
In the wake of the reversal of the landmark 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade, as well as the revelations of the congressional hearings into the events on Capitol Hill on Jan. 6, 2021, some expert observers say Canada needs to disaster-proof its relationship with the United States in preparation for worsening political instability in that country in the future.
9 June
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets with the President of the United States of America, Joe Biden
(Gov. of Canada Readout) Today [9 June], Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met with the President of the United States of America, Joe Biden, to reiterate their commitment to deepening the Canada-U.S. partnership on a wide range of bilateral, regional, and global challenges.
The leaders discussed Putin’s illegal and unjustifiable military aggression against Ukraine, the immense human grief and suffering, and stressed their unwavering commitment to continue supporting the government and people of Ukraine. The leaders agreed to continue their close cooperation on sanctions alignment, and on economic, humanitarian, military, and other forms of assistance, and to continue working with partners and allies to maintain unity in the face of Russia’s disregard for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, and the rules-based international order.
The Prime Minister noted Canada’s commitment to the defence and security of NATO Allies, and of the North American continent. He outlined Canada’s recent defence spending commitments in Budget 2022, and discussed support of North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) modernization.
On the Summit of the Americas, the Prime Minister and the President shared their mutual commitment to the Summit theme of “Building a Sustainable, Resilient, and Equitable Future.” The Prime Minister noted his commitment to supporting inclusive economic growth, pandemic recovery, climate action, the green transition, and democratic resilience in the hemisphere. The Prime Minister expressed his support for President Biden’s Americas Partnership for Economic Prosperity, and looked forward to working together with the President and other hemispheric partners to advance the well-being of people across the hemisphere.
The Prime Minister and President discussed irregular migration and forced displacement, and reiterated their commitment to working together to address the root causes of migration. The Prime Minister expressed his support for the Los Angeles Declaration on Migration and Protection, and his commitment to enhance cooperation with the U.S. and other partners to respond to the current humanitarian, protection, and irregular migration challenges in the region.
The Prime Minister and President discussed the ongoing crisis in Haiti.
The leaders noted the polarizing effects of disinformation, and the grave threat it poses to civil societies, especially in Russia.
15 March
White House to withdraw key agricultural trade nominee
The Biden administration plans to pull Elaine Trevino’s nomination as chief agricultural negotiator at USTR.
(Politico) The withdrawal of Trevino’s nomination, however, will prolong the vacancy in a key role at USTR at a time when agricultural trade and rising food prices have attracted global interest. Russia’s war in Ukraine has triggered foreign export controls on grain and prompted rising concern about food supplies around the world. Agricultural negotiations are also a major component of the Biden administration’s proposed Indo-Pacific Economic Framework. And at home, farm groups want USTR to make sure that China, Canada, Mexico and other countries are honoring previous commitments they made to open their markets to U.S. farm goods.
8-10 February
U.S. offers Trudeau government help to end border blockade
White House says Homeland Security chief urged Ottawa to use its powers to quash the blockade
(CBC) The White House says U.S. officials had multiple conversations on Thursday with their Canadian counterparts about the blockade on the Ambassador Bridge, a major trade artery which connects Windsor, Ont. with Detroit.
The White House said Thursday the U.S. federal cabinet and senior administration staff are now seized with this issue.
Canada must end the Ambassador Bridge blockade, says Michigan congresswoman
U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell says Canadian officials must bring an end to the blockage at the Ambassador Bridge that connects Windsor, Ont., to Detroit.
(CBC As It Happens) The blockade at the Ambassador Bridge has Americans wondering whether the U.S. is too reliant on Canadian manufacturing, a Michigan congresswoman says.
Protesters demanding an end to pandemic restrictions have been blocking access to the bridge that connects Windsor, Ont., to Detroit for four days as of Thursday. It’s one of several anti-mandate protests across the country.
The demonstration has, so far, remained limited to the Canadian side of the bridge, which is a major U.S.-Canada trade route, especially for the automotive industry. However, traffic has been blocked in both directions.
U.S. politician uses blockade at Canada-U.S. border to argue for Buy American
Ambassador Bridge shutdown has hit car plants at an awkward moment
A U.S. lawmaker has seized on blockades at the Canada-U.S. border to argue for more Buy American-style policies and for less reliance on buying goods from Canada.
The call from Michigan Democrat Elissa Slotkin comes as the protest at a vital Windsor-Detroit crossing has slowed commercial cargo delivery and hit car plants, with several companies stopping production.
“Michiganders have been saying for decades that when our manufacturing is outsourced too much, we end up paying the price,” Slotkin wrote in a series of tweets Wednesday night.
Anti-vaccine mandate protests spread across the country, crippling Canada-U.S. trade
(CBC) Federal ministers warned Wednesday that anti-vaccine mandate protests at two key Canada-U.S. border crossings have the potential to seriously disrupt the flow of goods in the days to come.
Speaking to reporters at a press conference in Ottawa, Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair said the blockade at Windsor’s Ambassador Bridge is particularly alarming because a quarter of all Canada-U.S. trade moves through that one crossing, which connects Canada with Detroit and points beyond.
Hundreds of millions of dollars worth of products have been held back for three days as 50 to 75 vehicles and about 100 anti-mandate protesters camp out on the main road that leads on and off the bridge.
The Canada Border Service Agency (CBSA) has closed the bridge to commercial traffic temporarily, diverting trucks to the Blue Water Bridge in Sarnia, Ont. instead. CBSA is reporting wait times in excess of four hours to make the short trip across to Port Huron, Mich.
How blocking the Ambassador Bridge shut down a quarter of U.S.-Canada trade
‘A closure of the bridge would be catastrophic for the Canadian economy’
(Financial Post) It didn’t take many protesters to shut down a major North American economic artery. The closure of one bridge straddling the U.S. and Canada exposes an alarming supply-chain vulnerability and has laid bare the grip one American family has over an effective monopoly.
There’s literally no bigger bridge for trade between the two neighbours. Built in 1929, the art-deco inspired structure carries on its slender steel build about a quarter of the total goods going back and forth between then the U.S. and Canada. The ties with Detroit’s car industry stretch decades. The bridge carries nearly as much trade as the U.S. does with all of the U.K.
Truck blockade at U.S.-Canada border could undermine supply chains for the auto industry.
(NYT) … The bridge is a vital link for the automobile industry, which relies on a constant shuttling of parts and components across the border to keep factories humming in Ontario and the Midwestern United States.
22 January
Experts say truckers should have done more to prepare for vaccine mandate
The Liberal government announced in November that all Canadian truckers looking to cross the border from the United States would need to be vaccinated in order to avoid a 14-day quarantine, a policy that came into effect last Saturday.
Warning of potential further damage to an already crimped supply chain, the Canadian Trucking Alliance urged the federal government over the past two months to keep the industry exempt from cross-border vaccine rules, or to delay them until 2023.
Up to 26,000 of the 160,000 drivers who make regular trips across the Canada-U.S. border would likely be sidelined as a result of the vaccine mandate in both countries, according to the Canadian Trucking Alliance and the American Trucking Associations.
‘Freedom Convoy’ leaves B.C. for Ottawa to protest trucker vaccine mandate
12 January
The US Can’t Take Canada for Granted
Washington’s recent moves contribute to political division up north and risk destabilizing a critical relationship.
By Allison Fedirka –
(Geopolitical Futures) There are no guarantees in geopolitics, but stability in the U.S.-Canadian relationship certainly comes close. However, a recent ruling by a panel under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement regarding Canada’s dairy management system is a reminder that no international relationship should be taken for granted.
In the wake of the economic devastation brought on by the pandemic, both governments are working tirelessly to reconstruct their economies and counteract growing domestic polarization. Though inwardly focused, these important efforts directly affect the bilateral relationship. In the U.S., policy is trending in a direction that has spillover effects on Canadian provinces where Ottawa has a high degree of sensitivity. This is a serious challenge for Canada, whose needs to preserve both the confederation and economic ties with the U.S. are not easily compatible.
Politico Ottawa Playbook reports OTTAWA ONBOARDING — New U.S. Ambassador to Canada DAVID COHEN has been sprinting through some notable high-profile meetings in the past week including with Eurasia Group vice chairman GERALD BUTTS, ex-Trudeau cabinet minister turned Climate and Nature Solutions principal CATHERINE MCKENNA, Brookfield Asset Management vice chair, transition investing head MARK CARNEY — a trio whom he called “Canadian climate leaders.”
Also in Cohen’s meeting minutes: Face-time with Trudeau’s former foreign affairs adviser turned UOttawa public and international affairs professor ROLAND PARIS, ex-Harper chief of staff now-UCalgary associate professor IAN BRODIE, Macdonald-Laurier Institute’s BRIAN LEE CROWLEY, and Carleton University associate professor/Westminster parliamentary system encyclopedia PHILIPPE LAGASSÉ, Conference Board of Canada CEO SUSAN BLACK, Business Council of Canada President and CEO GOLDY HYDER, Deloitte Canada’s TREVIN STRATTON and former Bank of Canada senior deputy governor CAROLYN WILKINS.
1 January
The American polity is cracked, and might collapse. Canada must prepare
Thomas Homer-Dixon, executive director of the Cascade Institute at Royal Roads University.
The U.S. is becoming increasingly ungovernable, and some experts believe it could descend into civil war. What should Canada do then?
(Globe & Mail) By 2025, American democracy could collapse, causing extreme domestic political instability, including widespread civil violence. By 2030, if not sooner, the country could be governed by a right-wing dictatorship.
We mustn’t dismiss these possibilities just because they seem ludicrous or too horrible to imagine. In 2014, the suggestion that Donald Trump would become president would also have struck nearly everyone as absurd. But today we live in a world where the absurd regularly becomes real and the horrible commonplace.
America in 2022: from The Globe and Mail
Stephen Marche: 2022 is the year America falls off a cliff. How will Canada hang on?
Michael Adams: We’re witnessing the continuing cultural divergence of Canada and the United States
Lawrence Martin: Don’t count on an American restoration in 2022
Editorial: Joe Biden’s presidency is in big trouble – and that’s good news for Donald Trump
2021
10 December
Canada threatens U.S. with tariffs, partial suspension of USMCA over electric vehicle tax credit
Minister of International Trade Mary Ng and Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland have written to top U.S. senators warning that proceeding with the electric vehicle tax credit will result in retaliatory action against the United States.
“The proposal is equivalent to a 34 per cent tariff on Canadian-assembled electric vehicles,” the letter says. “The proposal is a significant threat to the Canadian automotive industry and is a de facto abrogation of the USMCA.”
Congress is proposing sizeable tax credits worth up to $12,500 US to buyers of new electric vehicles — as long as those cars are manufactured by union workers in the U.S.
Experts agree the tax measure would deal a major blow to the Canadian automotive sector, which is trying to attract new investment as the industry transitions away from internal combustion engines.
26 November
A New Third Option for Canada-US Relations
(Policy) Depending on which leaders were in power in Ottawa and Washington, which bilateral issues lay dormant or erupted as irritants, and what global events and pressures happened to be buffeting the dynamic, Canada-US relations have seen multiple incarnations. Veteran diplomat Jeremy Kinsman looks at what we’ve lived through together, and how we should approach today’s America. Canada’s Bilateral Relationship Status Update: From ‘Sibling’ to ‘Neighbour’
Lisa Van Dusen
(Policy)The past two decades have seen an evolution in Canada’s most important relationship. The clichés about our neurotic obsession with America as the swaggering older sibling have receded amid Canada’s confidence about its place in a globalized world. And, as longtime Washington columnist Lisa Van Dusen writes, after the reality-show nightmare of his predecessor, Joe Biden has been a sanctuary of sanity
19 November
Trudeau’s U.S. visit delivers wake-up call about new North American reality
Americans see trouble ahead — and see protectionism as a solution
Alexander Panetta
(CBC Analysis) Former U.S. president Donald Trump’s protectionist impulses were no aberration: this era is vastly different from the one that produced the 1965 Auto Pact and spurred decades of Canada-U.S. economic integration.
Our challenge now involves living beside a worried superpower that’s distracted by generational challenges in which Canada is at best a bit player.
At a GM plant in Detroit, Biden clearly articulated the goal of his tax-credit plan for electric vehicles: “To buy American-made, union-made, clean vehicles.”
It’s now China, China, China
But the president said something else in that speech that reveals an aspect of the American psyche that pervades everything else at this particular moment.
Biden called this an inflection point in history, comparing the globe to a chessboard where all the old pieces are moving around; he predicted future generations will ask a question about our time: Did the United States compete with China?
That fear of losing pervades nearly everything in Washington — lost economic power, lost manufacturing capacity, lost military supremacy.
Even in a week where the United States hosted its two closest neighbours and biggest customers for a so-called Three Amigos summit, North America was the second-biggest international story here.
A virtual call between Biden and China’s Xi Jinping not only drew far more media coverage, but infinitely more curiosity from the American public.
17-18 November
After talks in D.C., Trudeau says he’s still concerned about threats to Canada’s auto sector
Experts say U.S. tax credit for American-made electric vehicles would devastate Canadian car production
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Thursday he pressed his U.S. counterpart to drop a provision of the pending $1.9-trillion social infrastructure bill which has the potential to devastate the Canadian auto sector.
At issue is a clause buried in the Build Back Better Act, President Joe Biden’s plan to inject hundreds of billions of dollars into social programs and climate initiatives to help juice the country’s COVID-19 recovery.
To spur the fledgling electric vehicle (EV) industry, the Democratic-controlled Congress is proposing sizeable tax credits worth up to $12,500 US to buyers of new electric vehicles — as long as those cars are manufactured by union workers in the U.S.
Biden was non-committal when asked if his administration would exempt Canada from such a tax plan, given that the North American auto industry is so deeply intertwined.
“We’re going to talk about that. It hasn’t even passed yet through the House … and we don’t know what will happen in the Senate. There’s a lot of complicating factors,” he said. The bill was expected to pass, with the tax credit intact, late Thursday.
At Summit, U.S., Canada and Mexico Avoid Thorny Questions
The meeting let North American leaders present a united front without going into detail on deeper issues, including trade disputes or migration.
“This is one of the easiest relationships that we have,” Mr. Biden said during a meeting with Mr. Trudeau, glossing over Canada’s complaints that the president’s buy-American policies on goods like electric vehicles have disrupted commerce between the two countries
At long last, the Three Amigos meet
(Politico) The CEO of the Canadian American Business Council, SCOTTY GREENWOOD, calls it a “happy coincidence” that she was able to gather a high-powered room of cross-border corporate and government luminaries [for the CABC’s annual State of the Relationship gala] on the eve of the first North American Leaders Summit in five years.
Trudeau ended his evening at the Hay-Adams, but he had himself a day. After his plane landed at Andrews Air Force Base on Tuesday morning, Trudeau headed to a panel at the Wilson Center’s Canada Institute, a think tank that indulges Canada’s desire for a piece of the discourse in the capital.
The PM brought key cabmins: Deputy PM CHRYSTIA FREELAND, Trade Minister MARY NG and Public Safety Minister MARCO MENDICINO.
Next up was a trip to Capitol Hill. Trudeau brought Freeland, [Canadian ambassador Kirsten] Hillman and Ng into a meeting at the walnut-paneled Rayburn Room with House Speaker NANCY PELOSI, minority leader KEVIN MCCARTHY and a bipartisan gang of congresspeople.
14 November
The Three Amigos: Getting North America in Gear Again
Colin Robertson
(Policy) Trudeau will pick up with Biden where our new foreign minister, Mélanie Joly, left off during her meeting last week with Secretary of State Tony Blinken. They discussed the geo-strategic issues – climate, COVID, China, the upcoming democracy summit, Afghanistan, Haiti – as well as the Enbridge pipelines 5 and 3 and the protectionist measures in the administration’s “Build Back Better” and infrastructure legislation.
The Joly-Blinken meeting was important on several counts: it affirmed that she will be the lead minister on US relations (it had gotten confused when Chrystia Freeland retained oversight after leaving Foreign Affairs). It also delegated discussion of the ‘irritants’ to the ministerial level (and with the impending arrival of US Ambassador David Cohen, the quiet diplomacy of our two ambassadors can resume). There has been an unfortunate tendency to want to push every problem to the prime minister’s discussions with the president. It baffles the Americans, who think that when G7 leaders meet the president, the top table should not be dealing with what Condi Rice called the ‘condominium issues’.
10 November
Biden to host Canadian, Mexican leaders at first Three Amigos summit since 2016
(CTV) High on that list will be a proposed tax credit for American-made electric vehicles, part of the Biden administration’s ambitious economic and social spending package known as the Build Back Better Act.
Critics say the credit, worth as much as US$12,500 to new-car buyers in the U.S., would give an unfair advantage to Big Three automakers and undermine the highly integrated auto manufacturing process that exists between the two countries.
That complaint dovetails with Canada’s broader concerns about Biden’s forceful Buy American rhetoric, which includes a more stringent vetting process for foreign contractors and suppliers looking to capitalize on a generational effort to overhaul U.S. infrastructure.
Pipelines, too, remain a point of contention: cancelling the Keystone XL expansion was part of Biden’s Day 1 agenda, and the White House has been dragged into a dispute between Michigan and Enbridge Inc. over a planned upgrade to the cross-border Line 5 pipeline.
The two countries are also bracing for a showdown on long-standing continental irritants like softwood lumber and dairy imports. The U.S. complaint about Canada’s rules for importing American-made milk products is the first significant trade dispute since the advent of the U.S.-Canada-Mexico Agreement.
Canada is also anxious to play a vital strategic role in supplying critical minerals and rare-earth elements to make the batteries and electronic components so essential to the rapidly expanding North American electric vehicle market.
8 November
What the U.S.-Canada border looks like on day land crossings reopen
(CTV) Travellers heading into the United States at major land border crossings experienced wait times of up to three hours in some areas on the first day in 20 months that fully vaccinated Canadians were allowed to cross for non-essential visits.
[Those] heading into the U.S. at the St-Bernard-de-Lacolle crossing between Quebec and New York were experiencing delays of up to 180 minutes at one point with six lanes open, according to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (USCBP) and the Canadian government site for Canada to U.S. border wait times.
3 November
Secretary Blinken’s Call with Former Canadian Foreign Minister Garneau
Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke with former Canadian Foreign Minister Marc Garneau today. Secretary Blinken congratulated Foreign Minister Garneau on his successful tenure as Foreign Minister and expressed his sincere appreciation for his partnership and ardent support of the U.S.-Canada relationship. Secretary Blinken noted the former Foreign Minister’s dedication and leadership on bilateral, regional, and global priorities, and the shared successes in developing the Roadmap for a Renewed U.S.-Canada Partnership, achieving the Declaration Against Arbitrary Detention in State-to-State Relations, and strengthening the U.S.-Canada relationship.
‘I wanted to make sure the Americans were first’: Mélanie Joly makes her first official call as foreign minister
Susan Delacourt
Canada’s new Global Affairs minister, Mélanie Joly, has held her first official call with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, kicking off a conversation she expects to consume a large amount of her time in the new job.
The two talked by phone on Wednesday. According to a U.S. State Department release, Blinken offered congratulations to Joly and hopes for continuing talks on the “close partnership” between their two countries. The secretary of state also spoke to Joly’s predecessor, Marc Garneau, to thank him for the service abruptly ended in last week’s cabinet shuffle.
Champagne in U.S. to talk unblocking supply chain, and push rare-earth minerals
Federal cabinet minister Francois-Philippe Champagne starts two days of meetings in Washington today with the goal of unblocking North America’s supply chain.
Champagne is the federal innovation, science and industry minister, a portfolio he describes as being at the core of building back Canada’s post-COVID-19 pandemic economy.
Champagne says he will be pushing Canada’s largely untapped rare-earth mining sector, which would allow the U.S. to be less reliant on China, the world’s leading supplier of those minerals.
The pandemic-induced bottlenecks have created shortages of semiconductors and rare-earth minerals needed to power everything from computers and cellphones to electric vehicles.
Champagne’s visit followed the talks that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, U.S. President Joe Biden and others held at last week’s G20 summit in Rome on easing the supply chain crunch that has clogged U.S. ports.
Champagne says a “regional” supply chain focus is required to make the North American continent more self-reliant and less vulnerable to offshore forces.