More stable investment environment will contribute to jobs and growth

BEIJING, CHINA – Prime Minister Stephen Harper today announced the conclusion of negotiations toward a Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA) between Canada and China, and witnessed the signing of a Declaration of Intent by Canada’s Minister of International Trade and Minister for the Asia-Pacific Gateway, Ed Fast, and China’s Minister of Commerce, Chen Deming.

“Investment flows between Canada and China are at an all-time high contributing significantly to jobs and economic growth in both countries,” said Prime Minister Harper. “Today’s landmark agreement will further facilitate these flows by providing a more stable and secure environment for investors on both sides of the Pacific.”

As part of the process, Canada consulted with a variety of stakeholders including those in mining, manufacturing and financial sectors.

Now that negotiations have been concluded on a FIPA between Canada and China, both countries will need to conduct a legal review of the agreement and then sign and ratify it.

The potential for increased Canadian investment in China is significant given the country is expected to become the world’s largest economy by 2020.

Standing at a record high of almost $5 billion at the end of 2010, Canadian investment in China increased by 38 percent over 2009 levels. Chinese investment in Canada the same year totalled $14 billion, an increase of 9 percent from 2009.

Canada currently has FIPAs in force with 24 countries and is engaged in active negotiations with 10 others.

This document is also available at http://pm.gc.ca

Backgrounder

CANADA-CHINA FOREIGN INVESTMENT PROMOTION AND PROTECTION AGREEMENT (FIPA)

The Government of Canada is committed to strengthening its strategic partnership with the Peoples’ Republic of China and to creating the right conditions for Canadian businesses to compete internationally. An important part of this equation is ensuring that two-way investment between Canada and other countries can take place in a stable, secure manner.

In keeping with this commitment, while in Beijing on February 8, 2012, Prime Minister Harper announced the conclusion of negotiations toward the Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA), and witnessed the signing of a Declaration of Intent by Canada’s Minister of International Trade and Minister for the Asia-Pacific Gateway, Ed Fast, and China’s Minister of Commerce, Chen Deming.

As part of the process, Canada consulted with a variety of stakeholders including those in mining, manufacturing and financial sectors.

A FIPA is a treaty designed to protect and promote Canadian investment abroad through legally binding provisions as well as to promote foreign investment in Canada. By ensuring greater protection against discriminatory and arbitrary practices, and enhancing predictability of a market’s policy framework, a FIPA allows investors to invest with greater confidence. Canada has consistently supported strong, rules-based investment through the negotiation of FIPAs.

Once implemented, the Canada-China FIPA will facilitate investment flows, contributing to job creation and economic growth in Canada.

In order for the FIPA to be ratified, the negotiated text must undergo a thorough legal review in English, French, and Mandarin. After the legal review is complete, the FIPA can be signed by both parties, made public, and then proceed through each country’s respective ratification process.

In Canada, the FIPA will be tabled in the House of Commons for 21 sitting-days following signature for Members of Parliament to review and debate. It will then come into force once the Governor General has given it royal assent and the Chinese ratification process has been completed.

Canadian investment in China, which surged to record levels in 2010, was valued at approximately $5 billion – an increase of 38 per cent over 2009 levels.  Investment took place in a broad range of sectors including financial services, transportation and technology.

Chinese investment in Canada reached $14 billion in 2010, an increase of 9 percent from 2009. Chinese firms are actively investing abroad and have expressed a strong interest in investing in Canada. Sectors of interest include, among others, natural resources and renewable energy.

Canada currently has FIPAs in force with 24 countries and is engaged in active negotiations with 10 others.

PRIME MINISTER HARPER LAUNCHES TOURISM CAMPAIGN IN CHINA

February 8th, 2012 by St Catharines Conservative EDA

BEIJING, CHINA – Prime Minister Stephen Harper today launched the Canadian Tourism Commission (CTC)’s new 2012 tourism marketing campaign, which will promote tourism in Canada by showcasing the many wonders and unique experiences our country has to offer. The Prime Minister launched the campaign at the official opening of the CTC’s newly outfitted marketing centre in Beijing.

“The tourism industry creates jobs and economic growth in every region of our country,” said Prime Minister Harper.  “Thanks to the landmark Approved Destination Status (ADS) agreement reached with the Chinese government in 2009, there has been a huge increase in the number of Chinese visitors enjoying the pristine beauty and vibrant cities that Canada has to offer. The new tourism commission office and marketing campaign being announced today are further signs that this industry, which generates such goodwill between our two great countries, is flourishing.”

Designed to promote Canada as an all-season destination of choice, the CTC’s 2012 tourism campaign focuses on a collection of travel experiences –the Signature Experience Collection – that will be used to showcase Canada’s many tourist attractions to the world, including the centennial celebration of the Calgary Stampede, which will be a focal point of the CTC’s efforts in China this year.

Since Canada was granted ADS by China in 2009, it has welcomed approximately 25 percent more Chinese visitors, including an estimated 232,000 travellers in the first 11 months of 2011. The introduction of two new Canadian visas in 2011 – the Long-Term Multiple-Entry Visa and the Parents and Grandparents Super Visa –  are also contributing to an increase in the number of international visitors to Canada by making the visa application process easier and more efficient.  By increasing people to people connections, Canada is strengthening its economic cooperation with China.

Tourism is an important source of revenue for Canada, contributing nearly $15 billion to the economy in 2010.

This document is also available at http://pm.gc.ca

 

Backgrounder

Canadian Tourism Commission Marketing Campaign in China

Tourism is an increasingly important industry in Canada and a key driver of economic activity in every region of the country. In support of Canada’s efforts to increase tourism, on February 8, 2012, Prime Minister Stephen Harper officially launched the Canadian Tourism Commission (CTC)’s new 2012 tourism marketing campaign in Beijing, China. This campaign will promote tourism in Canada by showcasing the many wonders and unique experiences our country has to offer. The Prime Minister launched the campaign at the official opening of the CTC’s newly outfitted marketing centre in Beijing.

The Canadian Tourism Commission in China

The Canadian Tourism Commission (CTC) established an office in China in 2005, recognizing that the country was a growing source of outbound tourism for the world. Since then, the CTC has built strong relationships with Chinese tour operators, media and Chinese government tourism authorities.

The CTC is bringing together an assortment of unique travel experiences called the Signature Experiences Collection, which will promote Canada as an all-season destination of choice, with its many tourist attractions. A centrepiece of this Collection for 2012 is the centennial celebration of the Calgary Stampede, which will be a key piece of the CTC’s international marketing campaign.

In addition to the CTC’s marketing efforts, Canada’s tourism industry has also benefited from securing Approved Destination Status from the Chinese Government, and the introduction in 2011 of two new Canadian visas which make it easier for international visitors to come to Canada.

Approved Destination Status (ADS)

In December 2009, the Chinese Government granted Approved Destination Status to Canada, allowing Chinese travel agents to advertise and organize group tours to Canada and to encourage more people from China to visit Canada.

Since being granted ADS, Canada has welcomed approximately 25 percent more Chinese visitors. The most recently released data suggest that Canada received nearly 232,000 travellers from China in the first 11 months of 2011.
10-year Multiple-Entry Visa and Parents and Grandparents Super Visa

Canada also recently introduced two visas that help make it easier for Chinese nationals and other international visitors to visit and stay in Canada. The Long-Term Multiple-Entry Visa, which came into effect in July 2011, and the Parents and Grandparents Super Visa, which came into effect in December 2011, aim to make applying for the visa easier and more efficient, strengthening cultural ties and bolstering Canada’s tourism sector.

The Long-Term Multiple-Entry Visa extends the maximum validity period from five years to 10 years (minus one month), or as long as the individual’s passport remains valid. This means that holders can come and go as they please from Canada over the 10-year validity period of the visa. This type of visa, which permits visitors to stay in Canada for up to six months at a time, is recommended for frequent visitors, such as business travellers or those with family in Canada.

The Parents and Grandparents Super Visa is also valid for up to 10 years and allows qualifying parents and grandparents to stay in Canada for up to 24 months at a time without the need to renew their status. With this new visa, eligible parents and grandparents pay fewer fees and have greater certainty that they will be able to enjoy the company of their families in Canada for a longer period of time.

St. Catharines, February 6, 2012 – The Honourable Rona Ambrose, Minister of Public Works and Government Services and Minister for Status of Women, and Rick Dykstra, Member of Parliament for St. Catharines, announced today the award of a $21.7 million contract to conduct the refit of the HMCS Athabaskan to Seaway Marine & Industrial Inc. (SMI) of St. Catharines.

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Statement by the Prime Minister of Canada at the World Economic Forum

January 27th, 2012 by St Catharines Conservative EDA

January 26, 2012
Davos, Switzerland
Prime Minister Stephen Harper made the following remarks at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland:

“Thank you Professor Schwab for that kind introduction, I also want to thank you particularly for the invitation to speak here that you extended to me earlier this year. But more than that, Professor, you have made the World Economic Forum an indispensable part of the global conversation among leaders in politics, business, and civil society.  And in the face of continuing global economic instability, the opportunity this gathering provides is now more valuable than ever.  So I know everyone here joins me in thanking you for, in service of the common good, your vision and your leadership.

“My Greetings to Ambassador Santi; to the Governor of the Bank of Canada, known internationally as Chair of the Financial Stability Board, Mark Carney; to our hard-working Minister of International Trade, Ed Fast; and to the best finance minister on the planet, Jim Flaherty. And let me just say that I’m especially proud to see so many outstanding Canadian business leaders making their presence felt here in Davos.

“Ladies and gentlemen, I will use my time today to highlight Canada’s economic strengths and to frame the choices we face as we work to secure long-term prosperity for our citizens in a difficult global environment that is likely to remain so.

“As you know, Canada has economically outperformed most industrialized countries during these recent difficult years for the global economy.

“Forbes magazine ranks Canada as the best place on the planet for businesses to grow and create jobs. The OECD and the IMF predict our economy will again be among the leaders of the industrialized world over the next two years.

“And, one more cherished accolade, of course, is that for the fourth year in a row, this body, the World Economic Forum, says our banks are the soundest in the world.

“These evaluations are the result of sound fundamentals. Among G-7 countries, Canada has the lowest overall tax rate on new business investment. Our net debt-to-GDP ratio remains the lowest in the G-7 – and by far.

“And, while we remain concerned about the number of Canadians who are still out of work, Canada is one of only two G-7 countries to have recouped all of the jobs lost during the global recession.

“Indeed, more Canadians are now working, than before the downturn. How was this achieved?

“Faced with the worst global economic crisis since the 1930s, our Government implemented some of the most extensive and targeted economic stimulus measures of the G-20.

“We made historic investments in infrastructure. We encouraged businesses to invest and helped them to avoid layoffs.  We put substantial funding into skills training, and we extended support for workers who lost their jobs.

“These things we did on a timely, targeted and temporary basis. We did not create permanent new programs or government bureaucracy.  As a consequence, our deficit is now falling, our debt-GDP ratio has already peaked and we do not need to raise taxes.  I should add that we also did not reduce immigration or give in to protectionism.

“Instead, we have maintained the high levels of immigration that our ageing labour force of the future will require. We have continued to pursue new trade agreements.

“And we have taken action to make Canada, among G-20 countries, the first tariff-free zone for manufacturers. We have pursued these policies, Ladies and gentlemen, because our number-one priority as a government is prosperity, that is, economic growth and job creation.

“Now, that may sound obvious, almost clichéd. But is it really? As I look around the world, as I look particularly at developed countries, I ask whether the creation of economic growth, and therefore jobs, really is the number-one policy priority everywhere?

“Or is it the case, that in the developed world too many of us have, in fact, become complacent about our prosperity, taking our wealth as a given, assuming it is somehow the natural order of things, leaving us instead to focus primarily on our services and entitlements?

“Is it a coincidence that as the veil falls on the financial crisis, it reveals beneath it, not just too much bank debt, but too much sovereign debt, too much general willingness to have standards and benefits beyond our ability or even willingness to pay for them?

“I don’t know. But what I do know is this. First, that the wealth of western economies is no more inevitable than the poverty of emerging ones, and that the wealth we enjoy today has been based on – and only on – the good, growth-oriented policies, the right, often tough choices and the hard work done in the past.

“And second, that regardless of what direction other western nations may choose, under our Government, Canada will make the transformations necessary to sustain economic growth, job creation and prosperity now and for the next generation.

“That further means two things: making better economic choices now and preparing ourselves now for the demographic pressures the Canadian economy faces.

“On what we must do now, first, we will, of course, continue to keep tax rates down. That is central to our Government’s economic vision.  But we will do more, much more. In the months to come our Government will undertake major transformations to position Canada for growth over the next generation.

“For example, we will continue to make the key investments in science and technology necessary to sustain a modern competitive economy.  But we believe that Canada’s less than optimal results for those investments is a significant problem for our country.

“We have recently received a report on this – the Jenkins Report – and we will soon act on the problems the report identifies.

“We will continue to advance our trade linkages. We will pass agreements signed, particularly in our own hemisphere, and we will work to conclude major deals beyond it.

“We expect to complete negotiations on a Canada-EU free trade agreement this year.  We will work to complete negotiations on a free trade agreement with India in 2013.  And we will begin entry talks with the Trans-Pacific Partnership, while also pursuing other avenues to advance our trade with Asia. Of course, I will again be making an official visit to China very shortly.

“We will also continue working with the Obama administration to implement our joint ‘Beyond the Border’ initiative – our plan to strengthen and deepen our economic and security links to our most important partner.

“However, at the same time, we will make it a national priority to ensure we have the capacity to export our energy products beyond the United States and specifically to Asia.  In this regard, we will soon take action to ensure that major energy and mining projects are not subject to unnecessary regulatory delays – that is, delay merely for the sake of delay.

“This complements work we are already doing, and that we will move forward on, with the Canadian Federation of Independent Business to cut the burden of red tape on entrepreneurs.

“We will also undertake significant reform of our immigration system. We will ensure that, while we respect our humanitarian obligations and family reunification objectives, we make our economic and labour force needs the central goal of our immigration efforts in the future.

“As I said earlier, one of the backdrops for my concerns is Canada’s ageing population. If not addressed promptly this has the capacity to undermine Canada’s economic position, and for that matter, that of all western nations, well beyond the current economic crises.

“Immigration does help us address that and will even more so in the future. Our demographics also constitute a threat to the social programs and services that Canadians cherish. For this reason, we will be taking measures in the coming months, not just to return to a balanced budget in the medium term, but also to ensure the sustainability of our social programs and fiscal position over the next generation.

“We have already taken steps to limit the growth of our health care spending over that period. We must do the same for our retirement income system.  Fortunately, the centerpiece of that system, the Canada Pension Plan, is fully funded, actuarially sound and does not need to be changed. For those elements of the system that are not funded, we will make the changes necessary to ensure sustainability for the next generation while not affecting current recipients.

“Let me summarize by saying, ladies and gentlemen, that, notwithstanding Canada’s many advantages, we remain very concerned about the continuing instability of the global economy of which we are a part. The problems afflicting Europe, and for that matter, the United States, are not only challenging today but, in my judgement, threaten to be even greater problems in the future.

“Having said that, each nation has a choice to make. Western nations, in particular, face a choice of whether to create the conditions for growth and prosperity, or to risk long-term economic decline.  In every decision, or failure, to decide we are choosing our future right now.

“And, as we all know, both from the global crises of the past few years and from past experience in our own countries, easy choices now mean fewer choices later.

“Canada’s choice will be, with clarity and urgency, to seize and to master our future, to be a model of confidence, growth, and prosperity in the 21st century.

“Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your kind attention.”

www.pm.gc.ca

 

Government of Canada invests in bio-manufacturing business development in Niagara

January 25th, 2012 by St Catharines Conservative EDA


The Government of Canada has made an investment in Brock University that will help it to partner with regional supporters to kick-start bio-manufacturing businesses in Niagara.

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St. Catharines City Council Votes to Support Local Marine Jobs

January 10th, 2012 by St Catharines Conservative EDA

St. Catharines – City councilors last night voted unanimously to support a resolution opposing New York State’s “unachievable” incoming ballast water regulations, urging the American and Canadian governments to take all possible measure to stop them from being implemented as proposed.

Stephen Brooks, vice-president of the Chamber of Marine Commerce, flanked by St. Catharines MP Rick Dykstra, made a presentation to council last night, outlining for councilors how potentially devastating these regulations could be for marine shipping on the St. Lawrence Seaway.  Afterward, he praised council for its support. “We’re pleased that the City of St. Catharines recognizes the potential harm that New York State’s regulations could bring to their city and region and we are hopeful that other Canadian and American cities around the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Seaway will also adopt similar resolutions.”

MP Dykstra reiterated Brooks’ position, saying the importance of opposing these measures cannot be overstated. “It is imperative that all of us work together to ensure the economic viability of the St. Lawrence Seaway is not compromised by these proposed regulations and I am very glad that the city of St. Catharines has joined in this effort.”

For more information on this issue, please see:

http://www.tc.gc.ca/eng/mediaroom/releases-2011-h111e-6537.htm

For more information on the Chamber of Marine Commerce, please go to:

http://www.cmc-ccm.com/about.php

PRIME MINISTER HARPER ANNOUNCES SUPPORT FOR HELMETS TO HARDHATS PROGRAM

January 6th, 2012 by St Catharines Conservative EDA

EDMONTON – Prime Minister Stephen Harper today announced support for Helmets to Hardhats, a program that will help provide Veterans, Canadian Armed Forces members and Reservists access to a range of careers within the construction industry, including apprenticeships in various building trades.

“Our Government is working hard to provide our dedicated military personnel, past and present, with the care, services, and financial support they need and deserve,” said Prime Minister Harper.  “We are truly proud to be part of the Helmets to Hardhats program which will help provide jobs and training opportunities for our brave Veterans, members of the Canadians Armed Forces and Reservists interested in transitioning to a career in the construction industry. The program will promote employment and economic growth while helping to meet labour needs in this sector.”

Helmets to Hardhats, a partnership with Canada’s Building Trades Unions, is an innovative partnership that brings union, private and public sector resources together to provide Veterans, members of the Canadian Armed Forces and Reservists with exclusive access to jobs and training opportunities in the construction industry, including administrative, engineering, human resources and onsite positions. The program will also stimulate growth by helping fill the much needed employment gap in the construction industry.

Candidates will be able to access information about careers and apprenticeships by telephone and from a newly developed Web site beginning in the spring of 2012. Veterans will be able to use the Helmets to Hardhats Web site to identify opportunities that interest them, and match their skill sets in the construction industry.

The Helmets to Hardhats program builds on existing programs under the New Veterans Charter which provides Veterans with the necessary support as they make the change from military to civilian life.

[Click Here] for PM announcement.

[Click Here] for CTV Edmonton coverage.

[Click Here] for Canada’s Action Plan announcement.

[Click Here] for Helmets to Hardhats business plan.

 Background

The Government of Canada is contributing $150,000 through Veteran Affairs Canada’s Community Engagement Partnership Fund to support Helmets to Hardhats, a program that brings union, private and public sector resources together to help provide Veterans, Canadian Armed Forces members and Reservists access to a range of careers within the construction industry including apprenticeships in various building trades. The program is modeled after the Helmets to Hardhats program in the United States, established in 2003.

The Helmets to Hardhats Canada program, a partnership with Canada’s Building Trades Unions, will benefit Veterans and Canadians by:

• Providing transitioning Veterans with exclusive access to jobs and training opportunities in the construction industry, where they can apply the skills they developed in the Canadian Armed Forces ;
• Helping them provide for their families and to contribute to their communities in a new way;
• Helping to meet labour needs in the construction sector; and
• Helping to generate employment that continues to fuel Canada’s long-term economic growth.

The Government’s contribution to the program will serve to assist with start-up costs including website development and promotional materials. In Canada, the program is set to begin in the spring of 2012.

The private sector is also an important partner in the program. To date, TransCanada Corporation has committed $1 million over 5 years to help strengthen the link between active military duty and civilian careers in the construction trades industry. Other private sector partners are also being sought.

The Helmets to Hardhats program complements existing programs available through Veterans Affairs Canada to help Veterans transition to civilian life:

• The Career Transition Services program, which is offered in partnership with the Canadian Armed Forces, helps Canadian Armed Forces members and Veterans re-enter the civilian workforce by providing services that focus on three principal areas: job-search training, individual career counseling and job-finding assistance.
• The Rehabilitation Program provides a range of rehabilitation services, including vocational assistance, to medically releasing Canadian Armed Forces members and Veterans who have service-related rehabilitation needs.

Why Canada’s corporate tax cuts rate a collective cheer

January 5th, 2012 by St Catharines Conservative EDA

NEIL REYNOLDS OTTAWA— From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

In an end-of-year review of his government’s achievements in 2011, Prime Minister Stephen Harper noted Forbes magazine’s selection of Canada as the No. 1 country in the world to do business. (“Credit a reformed tax structure,” Forbes declared.) Mr. Harper was right to cite this distinction. On New Year’s Day, Canada’s corporate tax rate – federal and provincial rates combined – fell to 25 per cent, giving Canada the lowest rate in the Group of Seven countries, and a more competitive economy on a global basis.

The provinces (especially British Columbia, Alberta and Ontario) collaborated with Ottawa to reach this strategic objective, announced shortly after Mr. Harper formed his first minority government in 2006. But the federal government did the heavy lifting: a 33-per-cent tax rate cut, implemented incrementally over five years, in the stridently antagonistic environment of successive minority parliaments. In annual steps, the government lowered the federal rate from 22 per cent to 15 per cent. (The provincial collaborators now have a common rate of 10 per cent.)

Remarkably, the gradual lowering of the corporate tax rate appears to have resulted in little loss in corporate tax revenue (when compared with long-term, prerecession revenues). Corporate tax revenue did take a big hit ($10-billion) in 2008, the year of the market meltdown. But the tax cuts were barely started in 2008.

By 2010-2011, federal corporate tax revenue reached $30-billion, substantially more than the average of $25-billion in the last four years of the prior Liberal government: 2002 through 2005. Further, federal corporate tax revenue equalled 1.8 per cent of Canadian gross domestic product, a much higher percentage than the revenue produced during the recessionary years in the early 1990s. In tough-times 1992, for example, corporate revenue, with higher tax rates, fell to 1 per cent of GDP.

Economists predictably disagree on the economic importance of corporate tax rates, mostly on an ideological basis, but it makes good sense to keep this particular tax as low as possible. These taxes, after all, are a direct cost of doing business – and Canada’s corporate cuts ensure that this country will have a cross-border edge for the next two or three years at least. With a combined federal-state rate of 39.2 per cent, the United States has the second-highest rate in the world (after Japan, with 39.5 per cent).

Eventually, the U.S. will respond. Republican presidential candidates have embraced deep corporate tax cuts; some of them, such as Texas Governor Rick Perry, propose a federal corporate rate of 12.5 per cent. Mr. Perry’s position reflects the judgment of his tax adviser, Steven Forbes – owner and editor of the eponymous magazine that ranked Canada as the best business domicile in the world. Mr. Forbes takes taxes seriously. (He declined to support Mitt Romney because the former Massachusetts governor wouldn’t endorse a single-rate personal income tax. Mr. Forbes has mocked Mr. Romney’s 59-point platform for its complexity, saying: “God only had 10 points.”)

Former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum proposes a permanent zero-per-cent corporate tax rate on all manufacturing companies – and says he would tax capital gains at 12 per cent (or half the rate that a typical Canadian now pays). Former speaker of the House of Representatives Newt Gingrich proposes an optional 15-per-cent flat tax on personal income and the elimination of capital gains taxes for people who choose the flat-tax alternative. Mr. Romney proposes to eliminate capital gains taxes for people with less than $200,000 (U.S.) a year in taxable incomes.

In his own end-of-year review, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty noted the completion of his corporate rate-cut assignment. He set out six years ago to brand Canada as a low-tax jurisdiction for business investment. He succeeded. On this file, Mr. Flaherty’s performance was as good as it gets. Mr. Harper and Mr. Flaherty probably don’t expect coast-to-coast hosannas. Nevertheless, it’s seems a bit much that the most audible applause has come from a business magazine based in New York. In fact, the Canadian government achieved a great legislative success in pursuit of an important economic objective. For this, it deserves a round of Canadian-based applause.

Mr. Flaherty’s job isn’t finished. He acknowledged this last year when he said the government would proceed, in due course, with personal income tax reform by reducing the number of tax brackets from five to two or three. In a world of vast and highly entropic complexity, simplicity is always an indispensible public-policy goal.

Globe and Mail

National Post editorial board: A better, prouder Canadian foreign policy

January 3rd, 2012 by St Catharines Conservative EDA

Dave Chan/Reuters
Under the Tories, we intervene when it will matter, and no longer crave the approval of the UN.

In a series of year-end interviews last month, Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird revealed just how much Canada’s foreign policy has changed for the better under the Tories. Gone are the days when our diplomats avoided taking pointed stands on issues that mattered to Canada so they could pretend to be “honest brokers” among the world’s warring nations. Call our new approach “muscular pragmatism.” We intervene where our involvement can make a difference; no longer worry what the moralistic — but largely useless — United Nations thinks of us; and are redirecting the efforts of our foreign service to expanding Canadian trade.

The “soft power” approach, advanced by the Liberals over two decades, got Canada nowhere and solved none of the world’s worst problems. The Liberals told us Canada should no longer stand with its traditional allies, such as Israel. If we took a more neutral stand on such matters as Palestinian statehood, the combatants would look to us as an unbiased adjudicator, or so the logic went. It didn’t happen that way. No matter how objectively we acted, the major powers never asked for our help. Even the United Nations, whose favour we were most trying to court, ignored us.

Our honest broker strategy failed us even where superpowers were less interested, such as in the Sri Lankan civil war. For years we refused to back the Sri Lankan government in its fight against the terrorist, separatist Tamil Tigers, despite the Tigers’ repeated use of suicide bombings and other attacks on innocent civilians. But our hands-off approach won us the trust of neither side. All it accomplished was to make Canada the Tigers’ largest single source of fundraising. By refusing to designate the Tigers as an outlawed terror organization in Canada, Ottawa permitted the group to use agents to extort tens of millions of dollars annually from ex-pat Tamils in Canada, potentially prolonging the conflict.

Under the Tories, we no longer are so naive and pretentious.

Take, for example, our decision to intervene in Libya in 2011, but not in Egypt, Syria or Tunisia. Ottawa judged, correctly, that the presence of our warplanes in the skies over Libya might help the domestic rebels defeat strongman Muammar Gaddafi, which it did (indeed, a Canadian general, Charles Bouchard, commanded the entire NATO effort). But there was no need to intervene in Tunisia — democracy there could win on its own — so we stayed quiet. Meanwhile, nothing could be done to direct events in Egypt or Syria, so nothing is exactly what we did, at least publicly.

The Tories also haven’t hesitated to deal more responsibly with the United States. Sometimes that has meant drawing closer to Washington, as with the new Beyond the Border agreement, despite the usual protestations from the left that we are undermining our sovereignty. Sometimes it has meant reminding the Americans that we’re certainly able to do business with others, if they’re not interested — a recent example being Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s musing about selling our oil to Asian markets if U.S. environmentalists make it too difficult for us to ship it south.

Perhaps the most welcome change in foreign policy under the Tories, though, is the way we no longer crave the UN’s approval. In 2011, we refused to play games — such as joining in the UN’s annual festival of Israel-bashing — just to win a seat on the Security Council. We opposed the General Assembly’s motion to grant Palestinian nationhood in the absence of any Palestinian assurance to recognize Israel’s right to exist. And, of course, earlier this month, we withdrew from the Kyoto Protocol, perhaps the UN’s most high-profile initiative.

The Tories have even started to make nice with China in order to advance our trade interests with the world’s most-populous country. Mr. Baird claims Ottawa will not soften its demands that China do more to respect human rights, political dissidents and ethnic minorities, but the Tories have decided to work with China for change, rather than to confront Beijing at world forums, as they had done while in minority. This sugar-instead-of-vinegar approach is more likely than the Tories’ old confrontational ways to produce results.

There will still be plenty of hand-wringing by the Tories’ critics about the way Tories are diminishing Canada’s reputation on the world stage and harming our chances of having an outsized impact — “punching above our weight,” as the Liberals liked to call it — on world events. But the opposite is true. In 2011, the Tories proved that standing up for Canadian interests, occasionally even forcefully, gets us much further on the world stage than our former, group-hug approach. We look forward to more of the same this year.

National Post
Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada – statements and releases

Bio centre key economic driver, says Dykstra

December 30th, 2011 by St Catharines Conservative EDA

A big piece of St. Catharines’ economic recovery puzzle fell into place this year — and there’s more to come, says the city’s federal representative.

Conservative MP Rick Dykstra said his look at the year ahead sees the limelight set to focus on downtown. But he said the biggest piece of the puzzle will be Brock University’s new biosciences centre, slated to open next year.

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