Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives worked into the
night to pass Biden's $1.75 trillion domestic investment bill
that includes the tax credits that Canada fears will undercut
its own efforts to produce electric cars. The bill then will go
to the Senate.
"The Americans are very aware of Canada's position on this, and
our concerns around it, and quite frankly, the threats it poses
to over 50 years of integrated automaking in our two countries,"
Trudeau told reporters late on Thursday after meeting Biden at
the White House.
"There are a number of ways to look at solving this," Trudeau
said without elaborating, adding that Canada would continue to
push to "find solutions".
The House of Representatives is voting on a social spending and
climate bill that includes a tax credit from 2027 for U.S.- made
electric vehicles that Canadian manufacturers say will cost jobs
and undermine the deeply integrated North American auto
industry.
Canada's industrial heartland of Ontario is geographically close
to U.S. automakers in Michigan and Ohio.
The tax credit issue was the first Trudeau brought up in his
meeting with Biden on Thursday, a government source said, and
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland on Wednesday warned the issue
risks becoming the dominant bilateral issue between the two
countries.
Canada says the tax credit would violate rules under the USMCA
(United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement). The White House
insisted on Thursday that it does not. Canada has said it would
retaliate if the tax credits are passed.
Trudeau - who was in Washington to attend the first meeting
between the leaders of the U.S., Canada and Mexico in five years
- said he discussed other contentious issues with Biden, such as
his 'Buy American' provisions and Michigan's push to shut down
Enbridge Inc's Line 5 oil pipeline, but found no solutions.
There was "no definitive win for Canada," said the Canadian
Chamber of Commerce, and the Conservative Party opposition said
the failure showed "Canada's relationship with the United States
has declined under Mr. Trudeau".
Trudeau had a rocky relationship with former President Donald
Trump, who once called him "dishonest and weak", and he hailed
Biden's election.
But Biden canceled an oil pipeline from Canada to the U.S. that
Trudeau supported on his first day in office, and Washington has
announced plans to double duties on imports of Canadian lumber
and requested a dispute panel on Canada's dairy import quotas.
(Reporting by Steve Scherer; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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