In
January,
trade minister Darin King wrote a letter to his federal counterpart about the
European trade deal.
King said the provincial government would:
- withdraw from any trade talks OTHER than the one about the European trade
deal, and,
- should “the federal government fail to honour the terms of the June 2013
agreement to establish a fisheries fund, you will appreciate that the Province
will reconsider its support for CETA.”
On Tuesday, King announced the provincial government would:
- resume participation in all the ongoing trade talks, and,
- accept the European trade deal, but not the bit on minimum processing
requirements.
That last one will leave Canada open to a challenge by Europeans if - and
only if - the provincial government ever invokes minimum processing requirements
in dealing with a European company. There’s not much danger of that since the
provincial government has been granting more and more exemptions from the
out-dated policy.
Besides, the federal government is already working on a mechanism to pass the
cost of any damages from a trade dispute on to the province that caused them.
They started work on that little gem after the current Conservative
administration in this province violated the North American free trade deal and
seized hydro-electric assets belonging to three companies under an entirely
false pretense.
When Darin King said the government would “let the chips fall where they may”
he knew full well that the provincial government would take it in the neck if it
ever used the minimum processing requirements provisions of current
legislation.
What you have here is a climb down. The provincial government position was
always a transparent pile of nonsense. As CBC’s
access
to information research confirmed last week, the provincial government has
been granting more and more exemptions from the minimum processing regulations.
In practical terms, that means they have already abandoned MPRs and won’t use
them to trigger any CETA problems.
What local media still haven’t reported is that the heart of this dispute has
been a
political
fraud by the provincial government. It tried to radically alter the deal in
2014. The federal government rebuffed the provincial government’s effort to
rejig the deal. Faced with no prospect of success in its scam, the provincial
government abandoned its ludicrous position.
Both the Liberal and NDP criticised the government for submitting to federal
perfidy. Nothing could be further from the truth, of course, but the truth
never stopped a politician in this province from opening his mouth before.
Tuesday was no exception.
Incidentally, the
letter
from King to his federal counterpart as well as the news
release
that King issued on Tuesday are both pretty vague about what the provincial
government is actually doing. King explained the details to
reporters.
This is the second time the
provincial
Conservatives have abandoned a stupid position on the European trade talks.
The first was Danny
Williams’
refusal to take part in the talks in the first place Williams claimed he
needed to protect the
seal
hunt.
-srbp-