Showing posts with label EU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EU. Show all posts

Saturday, 8 November 2008

Canada, European Union to seek closer economic partnership


In the current global economic climate, we agreed that closer economic cooperation with key partners is becoming more important than ever.


Friday, 17 October 2008


Welcome to Canada Mr. Sarkozy

It is great to have French President Nicolas Sarkozy visiting in Quebec City today. Hopefully the two can discuss the current economic crisis and also a potential free trade deal between Canada and the EU. Mr. Sarkozy will also open up the La Francophonie summit today as well before leaving for Camp David. Unfortunately Sarkozy's wife Carla Bruni will not be traveling with the President today. Nicolas Sarkozy is a key leader in Europe and is potentially the most influential Conservative politician in the world right now.
-Darryl

Thursday, 18 September 2008


Canada in free trade talks with EU

This is good news for Canada and great work by Fortier/Emerson and Stephen Harper. I look forward to the conference on October 17. This has potential to be huge for the Canadian and European economies. I am very happy with the Conservative government's approach to free trade agreements.
-Darryl

Canada-EU trade proposal rivals scope of NAFTA

Plan to lift barriers for goods and labour to be discussed at summit after election

From Thursday's Globe and Mail

LONDON — Canadian and European officials say they plan to begin negotiating a massive agreement to integrate Canada's economy with the 27 nations of the European Union, with preliminary talks to be launched at an Oct. 17 summit in Montreal three days after the federal election.

Trade Minister Michael Fortier and his staff have been engaged for the past two months with EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson and the representatives of European governments in an effort to begin what a senior EU official involved in the talks described in an interview yesterday as “deep economic integration negotiations.”

If successful, Canada would be the first developed nation to have open trade relations with the EU, which has completely open borders between its members but imposes steep trade and investment barriers on outsiders.

The proposed pact would far exceed the scope of older agreements such as NAFTA by encompassing not only unrestricted trade in goods, services and investment and the removal of tariffs, but also the free movement of skilled people and an open market in government services and procurement – which would require that Canadian governments allow European companies to bid as equals on government contracts for both goods and services and end the favouring of local or national providers of public-sector services.

Previous efforts to reach a trade pact with Europe have failed, most recently in 2005 with the collapse of the proposed Trade and Investment Enhancement Agreement.

But with the breakdown of World Trade Organization talks in July, European officials have become much more interested in opening a bilateral trade and economic integration deal with North America.

A pact with the United States would be politically impossible in Europe, senior European Commission officials said.

A newly completed study of the proposed deal, which European officials said Prime Minister Stephen Harper decided not to release until after the election, concludes that the pact would increase bilateral trade and investment by at least $40-billion a year, mainly in trade in services.

Ottawa officials say they have overcome what they see as their biggest hurdle: the resistance of provincial governments to an agreement that would force them to allow European corporations to provide their government services, if their bids are the lowest.

Although Ottawa's current list of foreign-policy priorities does not include European issues, European and Canadian officials say Mr. Harper has been heavily engaged with the proposed trade pact.

The two governments have completed a detailed study of the proposed agreement that will be unveiled shortly after the election, should the Conservatives win.

Both Ottawa and Brussels have had staff work on a draft text for a deal they had hoped would be introduced at a Canada-EU summit, to be attended by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and Mr. Harper in Montreal on Oct. 17. France currently holds the rotating presidency of the EU, and Mr. Sarkozy has said that he hopes to make economic integration with Canada one of his accomplishments.

Last Wednesday, a top Ottawa trade official wrote to Mr. Mandelson to propose “the launch of comprehensive negotiations toward a closer economic partnership at the Canada-EU Leaders Summit, to be held on October 17,” and stressed that all 13 provincial and territorial governments had agreed to the proposed pact at a July 18 meeting in Quebec City.

Because of the election, Mr. Harper appears to have decided not to unveil a full text of the proposed agreement, but instead to use the summit to inaugurate the trade talks with the launch of a “scoping exercise” that will quickly set the goals of the pact and lead to formal “comprehensive trade and investment negotiations” to begin in “early 2009,” according to communications between senior Canadian and European officials examined by The Globe and Mail.

Proponents, including all of Canada's major business-lobby organizations, are in favour of the deal because it would open Canadian exporters to a market of 500 million people and allow the world's largest pool of investment capital into Canadian companies without restrictions.

Because Canada's fractious provinces have killed attempts at a trade pact in the past, Europe is demanding that Canada accept a more far-reaching agreement than Canada and Europe had attempted before, in an effort to win a stronger commitment, EU officials said.

Major “deal-breaker” conditions, officials said, include full agreement by all 10 provinces, especially on the issue of European companies providing government services, and what are known as “geographic indicators,” which forbid products such as champagne and feta cheese to be produced under those names outside their nations of origin. Controversially for Canada, this may soon be extended so only English producers can use the name cheddar on their cheese.

However, both sides agree that there is far more political will to negotiate a major deal, on both sides than there ever has been.

“I am far more optimistic this time than I've ever been in the past. … I feel very confident that we will be able to launch something on Oct. 17 that will give us a better chance than we've ever had before to get a full deal in place,” said Roy MacLaren, head of the Canada-Europe Round Table, a pro-trade business organization that has been heavily involved in the negotiations.

As a trade minister in the Jean Chrétien government and later as a diplomat, Mr. MacLaren was involved in several previous attempts at a Canada-EU pact.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080918.wtrade18/BNStory/International/

Friday, 25 July 2008



Sarkozy looking forward to meeting his "friend" Obama

Perhaps the most impressive Conservative leader on the world stage today seems to be coming close to endorsing Obama as President. Sarkozy was elected as a Conservative in France and has been mentioned several times during McCain speeches during the Republican primaries. The Conservative leader in the UK David Cameron (who is also likely the next British PM) is also fighting to maximize his photo op today with Obama. I am not sure if this is a generational thing or signs that a new form of Conservatism in Europe is trying to part with the failed legacy of George Bush and his brand of "Conservative" ideology. It will be interesting to see if Obama makes a trip to Canada before the next election.
-Darryl

Quotes from Sarkozy:

"Obama? He's my pal," the president told Le Figaro. "Unlike my diplomatic advisors, I never believed in Hillary Clinton's chances. I always said that Obama would be nominated."

Sarkozy added that an Obama victory "would validate" his strategy of reconcilation with the United States. His embrace of the United States has made him American conservatives' favorite Continental politician, but he doesn't seem to be reciprocating."


Quote from Cameron:

Referring to Mr Obama's speech, in which he warned that absent black fathers were behaving like teenagers and shirking their responsibilities, Mr Cameron said: 'I think he's absolutely right.

' I mean I think it's a very brave thing to do.

'And it will have a huge influence that he has said it.

'I've had a number of meetings with black church leaders who make the same point too.

'They are very concerned about family breakdown and social breakdown and want to see what I call a responsibility revolution take place.

'I think it is a very important part of our responsibility agenda.'

The veteran civil rights campaigner Jesse Jackson has accused Mr Obama of 'talking down to blacks', but Mr Cameron said this was wrong.

He told the Guardian: 'We will never solve the long term problems unless people also take responsibility for their own lives.'

***

Nicolas Sarkozy ready to welcome his 'friend' Barack Obama

With Barack Obama due in Paris for a fleeting stop on his European tour, President Nicolas Sarkozy has boasted that he is "the only one in France" to know the Democrat candidate, who he called "my friend".


By Henry Samuel in Paris
Last Updated: 12:44PM BST 25 Jul 2008

In fact, the French leader met Mr Obama only once, in 2006 at the Congress in Washington, when Mr Sarkozy was interior minister. The President said he had good memories of their encounter.

In his typically outspoken manner, Mr Sarkozy is quoted by Le Figaro as adding that "Unlike my diplomatic advisors I never believed in Hillary Clinton's chances. I always believed that Obama would be nominated."

Despite the warm words, the Parisian leg of Mr Obama's tour is strikingly low-key compared to his Berlin stopover yesterday, when he gave a rousing speech to a crowd of 200,000.

France is the only country in his three-nation tour where he will not be staying the night.

"Senator Obama looks forward to meeting with President Sarkozy and discussing areas of mutual interest, including the common challenges of security, transnational threats, and the global economy," his national security spokeswoman said.

"President Sarkozy has made the bilateral Franco-American relationship and the Transatlantic Alliance a centrepiece of his presidency, and Senator Obama looks forward to discussing how to build on these important initiatives," she said.

But French commentators recognized that despite Mr Sarkozy's pro-American stance, cosying up to France - which opposed the US-led invasion of Iraq - is unlikely to win Mr Obama many votes back home.

John Kerry, the Democratic nominee in 2004, was lambasted by conservatives just because he could speak French.

Mr Obama and Mr Sarkozy will meet this afternoon and hold a joint press conference - something the Democrat declined to do with Gordon Brown when the two meet in London tomorrow.

The Illinois senator heads off to London this evening.

***

No 10 fights Cameron for best Obama photo opportunity


Barack Obama will bid farewell to Europe with a stopover in London that has been causing angst in Downing Street because of fears that David Cameron may steal the thunder from Gordon Brown.

In contrast to Berlin, where-hundreds of thousands of fans turned out to see the Democrat nominee-presumptive, the London leg of the tour will be conducted almost entirely out of the public view. Mr Obama will largely be meeting political leaders, Labour and the Conservatives having been engaged in high-wire negotiations to win the “battle of the photo opportunity”. It looks like the Tories have secured the better photo spot, despite there having been no firm plans for a meeting with the party leader as recently as ten days ago.

Mr Obama, who will arrive from Paris late tonight, will receive Tony Blair, now the Middle East peace envoy, first thing tomorrow morning, talking to the former Prime Minister – who is much better known in the US than Mr Brown – about climate change and the Palestinian situation.

He will then make his way to Downing Street for breakfast with Mr Brown.

Strict protocol requires Mr Brown not to appear on the steps of No 10 standing next to Mr Obama, because he did not do the same for John McCain, the Republican nominee, when he was here in May. Instead the handshake and farewell photographs will be taken inside, and Mr Obama will leave No 10 on his own to address the press.

He will then travel by car to the Houses of Parliament for his meeting with Mr Cameron, in the Conservative leader’s office overlooking the Thames.

The choreography of this switch-over caused high tension this week when Mr Obama’s advisers informed Downing Street that Mr Cameron would “collect” him on foot and they would walk the few yards to Parliament. That would provide a huge “spontaneous” photo opportunity that Mr Brown would be unable to match. The Obama team withdrew the suggestion after high-level representations from senior government figures.

The Conservatives are still on course for the better photo opportunity after Andy Coulson, the party’s director of communications, took over the negotiations. Mr Cameron is to be pictured with the presidential candidate walking down the cloister of New Palace Yard in the Palace of Westminster. This is the same shot taken of Mr Cameron and Mr McCain in May – and provides a better backdrop than a Downing Street fireplace.

The Democrat nominee has rebuffed all requests for British media interviews, having also barred nonUS media organisations from travelling with him. Instead he will record an interview with Tom Brokaw, of NBC, for broadcast as he flies back to Chicago.

Full Obama speech in Germany

Barack Obama addresses a crowd of over 200,000 people in Tiergarten, Berlin.

 

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