(CBC News – The Canadian Press)
U.S. congressional leaders appear to be prepared to work with Canada to dampen the threat of protectionism between the world’s two largest trading partners, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said Wednesday.
Earlier, the finance minister met with several key senators, including former Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, as well as House budget chairman John Spratt, on the financial crisis and trade issues. “What I heard today was a willingness to work on this issue,” he said in a conference call from Washington. “[And] that Canada is viewed as having a special trading relationship with the United States.”
But Flaherty gave no indication whether the congressmen he met, who were both Republicans and Democrats, were willing to lobby for a repeal of the so-called “Buy America clauses being inserted in billions of dollars of infrastructure spending programs.”
The laws require lower-level governments to use American steel and manufactured goods exclusively in procurement that uses federal infrastructure dollars. The laws do not contravene free trade agreements because the spending is being directed by states and municipalities, not Washington. Read more here.