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Trudeau, Trump hold talks

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LOW KEY APPROACH: Immigration issues likely to avoided during the meeting -


OTTAWA: When Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visited US President Donald Trump on Monday, he looked to nurture economic ties while avoiding tensions over issues such as immigration on which the two are sharply at odds.


Trudeau has taken a low-key approach toward Trump, a Republican who campaigned on a pledge to toughen US immigration policies and renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement among Canada, the United States and Mexico.


At a news conference on Friday, Trudeau also said he would look to “defend and demonstrate Canadian values,” but do so “respectfully and not from an ideological standpoint.”


Trump’s vow to renegotiate Nafta has unnerved Canadian officials, even though he has singled out Mexico in his criticism of the free trade deal that he has called a US job killer. Canada sends 75 percent of its exports to the United States.


Details about a tense telephone call late last month between Trump and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has also stirred wariness.


The Washington Post, citing unidentified senior US officials, said Trump abruptly ended the call and said it was the “worst call by far” he had had with a foreign leader, even though Australia has long been a staunch US ally. On Twitter, Trump labeled a refugee swap deal with Australia “dumb.”


Trudeau had a strong rapport with former Democratic President Barack Obama, prompting pundits to describe their relationship as a “bromance.”


Soon after Trump put a hold on allowing refugees into the United States and temporarily banned travelers from seven Muslim-majority countries, citing the need to head off attacks by militants, the Canadian prime minister took to Twitter to say refugees were welcome in Canada. “To those fleeing persecution, terror & war, Canadians will welcome you, regardless of your faith. Diversity is our strength #WelcomeToCanada,” Trudeau wrote.


A White House official said a number of topics were expected to be discussed, including Nafta and the Keystone pipeline.


Canadian pollster Nik Nanos said Trudeau, who remains popular at home more than a year after winning a surprise Liberal majority government, faces the same pressure all Canadian leaders do when they engage with US presidents - keep the economic ties tight but do not appear too chummy or subordinate.


Nanos expects that Trudeau, if asked, will speak about how Canada is welcoming refugees or seeking to expand free trade, without saying anything critical about Trump’s point of view, conscious that Trump has not hesitated to take an aggressive tone with other leaders. — Reuters


 


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