Canada must be part of TPP, will defend farmers: Harper

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Published: June 25, 2015

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Prime Minister Stephen Harper, shown here speaking Thursday in Quebec City, said it’s “essential” for Canada to be in on a Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact. (Jason Ransom photo courtesy PMO)

Ottawa | Reuters — Canada must join a proposed Pacific trade pact but will strive to protect farmers, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Thursday, referring to foreign pressure to scrap tariffs that protect the dairy industry.

Some of the 12 nations taking part in talks on a Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) want Canada to start dismantling its supply management system, which protects dairy, egg and chicken producers.

That could challenge Harper politically in the run-up to a close-fought Oct. 19 election, especially since his Conservative Party has broad support in rural areas.

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The U.S. Senate on Wednesday passed legislation vital to securing the deal, which will in theory allow negotiators to quickly hammer out the details.

Patience with Ottawa is running out. On Thursday, U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman made clear that Washington wanted to see movement.

“We have work to do… with Canada on issues like dairy and poultry, where we are certainly waiting for them to come to the table with a meaningful offer,” Froman told a forum organized by Foreign Policy magazine.

Proponents say TPP would cover 40 per cent of the world economy and raise annual global economic output by nearly $300 billion.

“It is essential in my view that Canada be part of that… we are working to open those markets for Canada,” Harper told reporters in Quebec City.

“At the same time we are working to protect our system of supply management and our farmers… Canada always, in our negotiations, does our best to act in the interests of all of our sectors and will continue to do that right to the end of these negotiations,” he said.

Harper did not give details about how Canada could both join TPP and protect supply management.

Officials played down a report in the Globe and Mail newspaper, which said Harper had decided Canada must sign onto TPP and start dismantling dairy protections despite the potential political cost.

“Negotiations are ongoing. Reports that Canada has made particular concessions are false,” said a spokesman for Trade Minister Ed Fast.

Harper, Fast’s department said, “will only sign an agreement that’s in Canada’s best interests” and the government “will continue to promote and defend Canadian trade interests across all sectors of our economy, including supply management.”

A spokeswoman for the Dairy Farmers of Canada said Ottawa had assured the lobbying group that it still backed supply management.

Harper spoke in Quebec, the province that produces 40 per cent of Canada’s dairy products and where the Conservatives aim to win more seats.

Quebec farmers last month took out full-page advertisements defending supply management.

David Ljunggren is a Reuters political correspondent based in Ottawa. Additional reporting for Reuters by Krista Hughes in Washington, D.C. Includes files from AGCanada.com Network staff.

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