Trudeau says Canada, EU
must lead world economy
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[February 16, 2017]
By Philip Blenkinsop
STRASBOURG
(Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Thursday that
the whole world benefited from a strong European Union and that the bloc
and his country needed to lead the international economy in challenging
times.
Trudeau told the European Parliament that the Union was an unprecedented
model for peaceful cooperation in a speech that marked his distance from
both the United States under new President Donald Trump, who has
questioned the value and future of the bloc, and from Britain, which has
voted to leave it.
An effective European voice on the global stage was not just preferable,
but essential, Trudeau said.
"You are a vital player in addressing the challenges that we
collectively face as an international community," he told EU lawmakers a
day after they backed an EU-Canada free trade deal. "Indeed the whole
world benefits from a strong EU."
Trudeau, who will also visit Germany, said that Canada and the European
Union shared a belief in democracy, transparency and the rule of law, in
human rights, inclusion and diversity.
"We know that, in these times, we must choose to lead the international
economy, not simply be subject to its whims," he said, according to a
text made available in advance of his speech, adding both parties had
shown they valued trade and a belief that it could bring prosperity to
their citizens.
With the passage of their trade deal, Canada and the European Union
offer a counter to Trump, who has withdrawn from the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) and wants to rework the North American Free Trade
Agreement.
For Canada the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) is
important to reduce its reliance on the neighbouring United States as an
export market.
For the EU, it is a first trade pact with a G7 country and a success to
hail after months of protests at a time when the bloc's credibility has
taken a beating from Britain's vote last June to leave.
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Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau adresses the European
Parliament in Strasbourg, France, February 16, 2017. REUTERS/Vincent
Kessler
Trudeau's speech, in English and French, got a warm welcome from lawmakers in
Strasbourg as he signalled Canada's distance from both its big neighbour to the
south under Trump and from London, where Brexit supporters argue that ties to
Britain's old empire can help expand trade once out of the European Union.
Both Canada and the EU, said Trudeau, needed to ensure that their Comprehensive
Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), set to enter force in months, worked for
people.
"If we are successful, CETA will become the blueprint for all ambitious, future
trade deals. If we are not, this could very well be the last. So make no
mistake, this is an important moment for us."
Trudeau said many people were worried that the current system only benefited
society's luckiest few and that this was a valid concern.
Trade, he said, must be inclusive, so that everyone benefited.
"And this agreement ... delivers just that."
(Reporting By Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Toby Chopra and Alastair Macdonald)
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