Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Christopher Sands

GET UPDATES FROM Christopher Sands
 

When It Comes to Trade, Harper Doesn't Like Three-Ways

Posted: 01/02/12 12:03 PM ET

British Prime Minister David Cameron's veto of a Franco-German deal to address the European debt crisis cheered many British "Eurosceptics" sceptical of the whole project of European integration and jealous defenders of Britain's sovereignty and independence as the best safeguards for the rights of Britons. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been resisting U.S. projects to advance North American integration trilaterally, preferring bilateral talks without Mexican participation. Is Harper advancing a North American version of Euroscepticism like his British counterpart?

North American scepticism (or perhaps it should be "skepticism" following the American spelling) would imply doubt about the transfer of national sovereignty to new, continental authorities and institutions. Yet the architects of continental economic integration in North America have always been careful to maintain national sovereignty, and have built few new institutions (and where institutions have been established, such as the North American Commission on Environmental Cooperation of the North American Commission on Labor Cooperation or even the North American Development Bank, they have been kept weak and accountable to the national governments). Proponents of further integration have not advanced plans for a common currency for North America. Critics of continental integration have invoked national sovereignty and democratic accountability, from the centre-right in the United States and from the centre-left in Canada and Mexico.

Canadian prime ministers Brian Mulroney and Stephen Harper have not embraced the Canadian centre-left's sovereignty critique of continental integration that exercised their Liberal opposition John Turner and Michael Ignatieff. Mulroney and Harper embrace free markets and the reduction of border barriers to trade.

Harper is more nationalistic than Mulroney, but his scepticism takes a different form than his Canadian sovereigntist critics. It isn't deepening integration that Harper approaches with caution, but trilateralism. Looking at the history of U.S.-Canadian relations, Harper appears to believe that progress in reducing economic barriers for Canadians has been faster and more profound when done bilaterally with the United States. Maybe it is because U.S. negotiators trust Canadians more, or share more cultural similarities. Perhaps it is that Canada is not seen as a threat to U.S. security or competitiveness. Nostalgically, it may be due to a memory of the shared sacrifice the two countries endured during the wars of the 20th century, or more contemporaneously, in Afghanistan.

Another interpretation is that Harper associates free markets with the Anglosphere, the countries that share a British heritage. American scholar James C. Bennett has made the case that the fundamental rights of private property, contract, rule of law, and limited responsible government that emerged from the Magna Carta in 1215 are the essential basis for free markets and stable integration. Like the Canadian-born Conrad Black, Bennett is both a Eurosceptic and a NAFTA sceptic because the addition of non-Anglosphere countries inevitably reduces liberty and the potential for free markets.

Only Harper and his intimates know for certain what motivates his reluctance to accept the trilateral framework for negotiating further continental integration that the United States has favored under Democratic and Republican administrations since Reagan. It would be wrong to categorize this Canadian outlook as a North American version of Euroscepticism; its principles are quite different. And while Anglospherianism can't be ruled out, this explanation sets up an inevitable clash between the U.S. and Canadian visions of continental integration where Mexico is concerned.

Harper's posture falls short of a rigid Anglospherianism, I suspect. Rather, it is merely a form of "trioscepticism" that doubts that sufficient progress can be made among three, and trusts more in the track-record of bilateral talks as the last best hope for Canadian interests on the continent. As such, it can be overcome by evidence of trilateral progress, and American persistence.

 
 
 

Follow Christopher Sands on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sandsathudson

British Prime Minister David Cameron's veto of a Franco-German deal to address the European debt crisis cheered many British "Eurosceptics" sceptical of the whole project of European integration and j...
British Prime Minister David Cameron's veto of a Franco-German deal to address the European debt crisis cheered many British "Eurosceptics" sceptical of the whole project of European integration and j...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 6
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
10:03 AM on 01/02/2012
If folks want to group together on issues, some will undoubtedly have to compromise and sacrifice choices. It's better if the combined benefits outweigh the combined problems. Centralized authority has it's downsides and is not easily undone.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Warren Yuill
Jesus Built My Hot-Rod
08:51 AM on 01/02/2012
Its a pretty reasonable position.
In any negotiations, there is a a natural give and take that has to occur in order for both sides to come to an aggreement.
When you reduce the number of positions in any discussion the less' compromise' has to happen for both sides to fid a solution.
Just try to get three people to agree on what toppings to put on a pizza and you'll see what I mea
03:09 AM on 01/03/2012
Simple. Canadian Chef's Special. Fully Loaded.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
logicanada
Blogger, radio co-host, writer, editor, voice-over
01:54 AM on 01/02/2012
In a clear and open government there would be no questions as to Harper's intention.
08:59 PM on 01/02/2012
In a clear and open mind, there would be no question as to Harper's intentions.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Valerie Keefe
07:40 AM on 01/03/2012
Yes, an attempt to dismantle Diefenbaker's legacy. Disrespect for parliament, for income disparity amelioration, for personal freedom when social harm is not demonstrated instead of simply created-as-hypothetical, irrational punishment binges substituting for crime policy, (Compare this to Diefenbaker and Fulton's record on prisons and justice,) and a respect for the rights of aboriginal Canadians and the obligations of the Canadian government to First Nations' governments.

Any true tory can't stand this Manchester Liberal with a blue button. All we have left are a bunch of quasi-Randian right-wingers who know nothing of classical conservatism, and find their seminal political work to be no more complex, and not substantively different from, the references the FLQ made to Trudeau.