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Pierre Trudeau, Ivanka Trump, and how the White House meeting got set up

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 WASHINGTON—The relationship-building effort with Donald Trump began within hours of his stunning election win. After the shocks in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, came a smaller surprise in a phone chat. (Photo: Ivanka Trump/Facebook)


WASHINGTON—The relationship-building effort with Donald Trump began within hours of his stunning election win. After the shocks in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, came a smaller surprise in a phone chat. (Photo: Ivanka Trump/Facebook)

WASHINGTON—The relationship-building effort with Donald Trump began within hours of his stunning election win. After the shocks in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, came a smaller surprise in a phone chat.

It was with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

The day after the election, Trump told the prime minister that he admired his dad, Pierre, and they’d actually met once—Trump spoke at a 1981 New York City event where the elder Trudeau was the guest of honour.

“We weren’t aware of it,” said a Canadian official.

Trudeau’s team figured a meeting of two public figures must have wound up in a photo, somewhere: “We looked for it,” said the official. They eventually found it through Library and Archives Canada, a black-and-white image of the prime minister’s dad sitting down, and Trump speaking from a podium.

A series of New York meetings followed.

Uncertainty lingered for months about the date of a Trudeau-Trump meeting because the Canadian side expressed a willingness to forego a quick get-together, in favour of taking the time to set a detailed program.

After a campaign where the president-elect had railed against NAFTA, Trudeau’s team said it wanted to send signals immediately to reassure business that the Canada-U.S. relationship remained on stable footing.

Someone from the Canadian side said the message to Trump’s team was: Our country will be watching this closely. “(This meeting) is a much bigger deal in Canada than it is in the United States,” was the message to Trump’s team.

Indeed, Canadian news sites were filled with stories about the meeting Monday. The event made hardly a ripple in the U.S.

So the Canadians and Americans set about discussing issues that hadn’t gotten any attention in the U.S. election, but which matter in Canada. Some of these issues are now enshrined in a joint statement of principles, released Monday by Canada and the U.S.

The statement refers to:

—Advancing bilateral trade.

—Expanding customs preclearance projects at the Canada-U.S. border, to get trade and goods through faster.

—The U.S. valuing Canada’s military contributions, including fighting ISIL and protecting Latvia.

—Improving labour mobility, including out-of-date visa rules that make it hard for companies to send employees across the border.

—A reference to infrastructure co-operation, which could give some Canadian companies hope of a respite from Trump’s promised Buy American provisions.

None of these were hot issues in the U.S. election. But now they’re Trump’s policies.

“We (didn’t) want to just say nice things,” the official said.

“We (wanted) to solve some issues…. The big thing for us is (we wanted) to calm some nervous people.”

In the meantime, Canada reshuffled its cabinet with Canada-U.S. relations the new priority No. 1. Chrystia Freeland became foreign minister, her chief of staff went to PMO to head up a U.S. desk, and the ambassador to Washington, David MacNaughton, began working possible allies in the U.S., like certain industry and labour groups, to speak up on behalf of trade with Canada.

They got to know their interlocutors — one called it a constructive relationship, across the board.

That includes Trump’s polarizing master strategist Steve Bannon. Bannon has spent years railing against multiculturalism and pro-globalization elites who attend summits at Davos, Switzerland, and warns of a multi-generational global war against radical Islam. That may not sound like a natural partner for Canada’s prime minister.

Yet sources say he was constructive, too.

A couple of weeks ago, Trudeau’s chief of staff, Katie Telford, had another idea: Why not work with Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, on women’s issues? She suggested it to Ivanka Trump’s husband, Jared Kushner.

The White House was looking for an opportunity to get the first daughter working on women’s issues, after pushing her dad to make maternal leave a campaign promise: “We gave them (this one).”

The president’s daughter was seated next to Trudeau at a round-table Monday. Two women inside the meeting said Ivanka Trump raised maternal leave, and access to credit.

At the meeting, Trudeau stressed the value of multi-country North American supply chains; Trump took an interest when one business leader spoke about Canada’s public-private partnership model for funding new infrastructure projects.

Some recent Canadian moves have caused disquietude on the left.

A number of social media comments were aghast about Canada giving the president’s daughter a platform, at a time her brand was being dumped by Nordstrom. There were equally annoyed comments about the sight of Bannon walking at laughing with Trudeau’s principal secretary at the White House on Monday.

On the right, the Conservatives warned that it’s too early to cry victory: Interim leader Rona Ambrose said Trump’s promised tweaks to NAFTA could still threaten Canadian interests.

Two women inside the meeting came away sounding positive.

“It was a great initiative,” said Linda Hasenfratz, the CEO of Linamar Corp, of the project with Ivanka Trump. “It’s absolutely the right thing, to build common ground. If you’re trying to build a relationship with someone you do it by finding common ground. What do you both believe in? What’s important to both of you?”

Annette Verschuren, CEO of energy-storage company NRstor Inc., and former head of Home Depot Canada, said of the project with Ivanka: “I think it’s very smart… We can go look for the negatives. We can find all kinds, in everything. But we operate in a nation that is extraordinarily dependent on, and has a strong relationship with, the United States. Many, many jobs.”

 

 

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