Premiers call for end to tariffs, reboot on Canada-U.S. relationship
WASHINGTON — Three of Canada’s premiers brought an earnest, brass-tacks message to the U.S. national capital Friday: hit the reset button on one of the most important cross-border relationships in the world by ending American tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.
Despite their conservative sensibilities, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, Saskatchewan’s Scott Moe and Blaine Higgs from New Brunswick may seem a disparate trio. But their styles — Moe’s analytical approach, the folksy charm of Higgs and Ford’s bluntness — proved surprisingly compatible.
Higgs, who hails from the New Brunswick border town of Woodstock, told a panel discussion about growing up right next to Maine, watching lumber-laden big rigs carry Canadian logs to U.S. mills over a boundary that almost seemed an afterthought.
“I could throw a rock across the border; my best friend lived across the border,” said Higgs, who traces the problems between Canada and the United States back to the 9/11 terrorist attacks in Washington and New York in 2001.