Justin Trudeau proposes lifting Mexican visa requirement - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 04:45 AM | Calgary | -1.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Justin Trudeau proposes lifting Mexican visa requirement

A Liberal government would lift the Mexican visa requirement and host a new trilateral summit with Mexico and the U.S. to repair relations with Canada's North American neighbours, party leader Justin Trudeau says.

Liberal leader says in Canada 2020 speech that move would help mend Canada-U.S. relations

Justin Trudeau says the Liberal Party would immediately lift Mexican visa requirements should it assume government in the election this fall, in a bid to renew relations between Canada and Mexico. (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)

A Liberal government would lift the Mexican visa requirement and host a new trilateral summit with Mexico and the U.S. to repair relations with Canada's North American neighbours, party leader Justin Trudeau says.

Trudeau, fresh from announcing his vision for electoral reform should the Liberal Party assume government in the election later this year, is taking his first serious foray into the realm of foreign policy, with a keynote speech delivered at a Canada 2020 event in Ottawa on Monday.

"Mexico is now an equal or greater strategic preoccupation in Washington than Canada. Thatbasic fact cannot be wished away," he said.

"As with the United States, [Prime Minister Stephen]Harper's approach to relations with Mexico has been belligerent andborderline churlish."

The federal government requires Mexican visitors to Canada to have a visa, a controversial requirement put in place in 2009 to curb bogus asylum claims, and that has strained relations between the countries.

Harper had also postponed the trilateral North American Leaders' Summit, referred to as the Three Amigos summit, which was scheduled for this past February, without much explanation.

In his speech, Trudeau largely blames Harper fordeteriorating relations between Canada, andthe U.S. and Mexico, calling for "real change" on how Canadian diplomacy is practised in order"to treat the relationship we have with the seriousness it deserves."

The federal government countered on Mondayby sayingTrudeauis "apparently unaware of a planned move to fast, secure electronic travel authorization for Mexico."

KevinMenard,press secretary for Immigration Minister Chris Alexander, said in anemailto CBC News that "under[Harper], Canada introduced10-yearmultiple-entry visa with Mexico and faster visa streams."

Clean energy agreement

Other initiatives Trudeau mentioned in his speechinclude apush for aclean energy and environment agreement with the United States and Mexico, Trudeau told the audience at the Chateau Laurier, including co-ordinating climate mitigation policies and aligning international negotiation positions.

He also proposed that a Liberal government wouldseekto reduce barriers to trade and commerce between Canada and the U.S. by, among other moves, improving border infrastructure and streamlining cargo inspection.
Canada's refusal to lift Mexican visa requirements and postponing the Three Amigos summit have contributed to frosty relations between Prime Minister Stephen Harper, left, and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto. (Reuters)

Trudeau said the government would, in addition,create a cabinet committee to oversee and manage U.S. relations, as well as boost the number of Canadian diplomats in "as many critical regions and communities as possible."

"Canada's special relationship with the United States is not automatic. Like any strong relationship, you have to put a lot of work into it, and continuallyearn it," Trudeau said in his speech.

"There is nothing preordained about our influence or value in Washington's eyes. Policy that fails to acknowledge this basic fact will fail."

Canada 2020 is an independent think-tank founded by former Liberal strategists.

Monday's speech, similar to last week's platform announcement, carried echoes of prime ministers past.

"From John A. Macdonald's deft management of fishing rights to Mike Pearson's negotiation of the auto pact, from free trade to abstention from the Iraq War management of Canada-U.S. relations is among the largest markers by which history remembers our leaders," Trudeau said.

Boost foreign policy credentials

Trudeau again mademention of his father, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, to contrast Harper's approach to the U.S.

"Everybody knows that my father and President [Richard] Nixon weren't exactly the closest of friends," he said.

"But it is hard to imagine any prime minister in the history of this country pulling Harper's fruitless stunt."

That "stunt" refers to Harper's 2011 trip to New York City where he said the approval of the Keystone XL pipeline project, which would extend from Alberta to Texas, was a "no brainer" widely seen as an attempt to goad U.S. President Barack Obama into action.

Trudeau said Harper has allowed the Keystone XL pipeline to define "one of the most positive and prosperous bilateral relationships the world has ever known. All of us, Canadians and Americans alike, are the poorer for it."

The keynote speech is an opportunity for Trudeau to bolster his foreign policy credentials.

The Liberal leader has come under fire for past remarks on international affairs, such as jokingly suggesting Russia's involvement in the Ukraine crisis was spurred by Russia's Olympic hockey loss and expressing admiration for China's "basic dictatorship."

With files from Catherine Cullen