European Parliament officials embarrassed by trade deal impasse with Canada - Action News
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European Parliament officials embarrassed by trade deal impasse with Canada

The European Union's inability to complete a trade agreement with Canada is an embarrassment and could harm its ability to negotiate future deals, a European Parliament vice president said in a radio interview.

European Parliament VP describes EU as 'impossible' negotiating partner amid CETA dispute

A protester holds a banner reading Stop CETA during a protest outside the Walloon regional parliament in Namur, Belgium on Oct. 21. (Francois Lenoir/Reuters)

The European Union's inability to complete a trade agreement with Canada is an embarrassment and could harm its ability to negotiate future deals, a European Parliament vice president said in a radio interview.

The Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) has been seven years in the making and is backed by all 27 other EU governments but was rejected by the French-speaking south of Belgium, meaning Belgium as a whole cannot sign it.
Alexander Lambsdorff, vice-president of the European Parliament, said he hopes the issues with Belgium can be worked out so CETA can be ratified. (Christian Marquardt/Getty Images)

"The European Union has shown itself to be an impossible international negotiating partner with this wrong whole process," Alexander Lambsdorff told broadcaster Deutschlandfunk.

The German Liberal lawmaker said he hoped Belgium could work out its issues over CETA to enable it to be signed this year.

Trudeau not travelling, yet

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau cancelled plans to travel to Brussels to sign CETA after Belgian politicians on Wednesday failed to break the deadlock over the deal.

Mulroney says 'some good sense' needed on CETA

8 years ago
Duration 12:38
Former prime minister Brian Mulroney discusses CETA and anti-trade rhetoric in the U.S. presidential campaign

Two other German representatives in the European Parliament also criticized the EU over the CETA negotiations. Manfred Weber, head of a conservative bloc in parliament, told broadcaster Hessischer Rundfunk that it was a mistake to allow all European parliaments to vote on the trade pact.

"It cannot be that one small region can block all of Europe," he said.

Bernd Lange, a Social Democrat, told broadcaster Suedwestrundfunk that the stalemate on the agreement should prompt serious discussion about the European decision-making processes and how to create more consensus.

German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel said last week he did not expect CETA to fail, but it could take some time to answer questions raised by Belgium and other countries.