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Entries in News & Announcements (17)

Thursday
Jan292009

President Obama Goes to Ottawa

As Enduring America reported yesterday, Pres. Obama will be visiting Ottawa on 19 February. The visit is significant for several reasons beyond that it will be Obama’s first foreign trip since taking office. In making this journey, Obama restores a tradition going back to at least Ronald Reagan whereby the new American president makes his first foreign visit to his northern neighbour (Here’s a Canadian news story about Reagan’s visit, which occurred less than a month before he was shot). Pres. Bush ended this pattern when, to the chagrin of Ottawa, he went to Mexico shortly after taking power.



Typically, when it comes to Canadian-American relations, the significance is mainly for Obama’s Canadian hosts. There is some importance for the new administration, however. Early in his term, Obama will want to look presidential on his first foreign visit through media coverage back home and around the world. The President will have to do this without the trappings of an official state visit since his sojourn will be for private meetings with Canadian officials. He will also be seeking Canadian support for Washington’s strategy in Afghanistan, a potentially tough sell since Canadian participation is widely unpopular among the general public and several of the opposition parties. Over one hundred Canadian soldiers have been killed in action, a higher proportion in relation to national population than that of the United States. The government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper has already committed itself to withdrawing Canadian troops from Afghanistan in 2011.



For Canada, the only foreign relationship that really matters is with Washington. Roughly 90% of Canadian trade goes to its southern neighbour and, until very recently, Canada was the United States’ largest trading partner (it’s now second after China). The concern in Ottawa is with talk of greater American protectionism, traditionally associated with the Democrats.



Here’s where it gets complicated. For the first time since possibly the 1930s, a U.S. president is in power who is arguably to the left of the Canadian prime minister. Stephen Harper is not a traditional Canadian Conservative. He is an ideologue who emerged out of a breakaway right-wing party that eventually seized control of Canada’s long-running Tory party.  Philosophically, Harper was much more at home with Pres. Bush than the new president, mimicking the foreign policy of his fellow traveller.



Complicating the picture even more is that a Harper official caused consternation and damage to Obama’s chances for the Democratic nomination back in February 2008. Ian Brodie, Harper’s chief of staff, leaked to the Canadian media  that Austan Goolsbee, an Obama economic advisor, had privately assured a Canadian diplomat that Ottawa had nothing to worry about when it came to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) despite Obama’s public pronouncements in rust-belt states that he would seek to change the treaty. Harper was forced to apologize for the embarrassing leak and Canadian officials scrambled to patch things up with the Obama campaign. Whether enmity still exists may emerge on 19 February.



Then there’s the Igantieff factor but that will be the subject of a future post …


Thursday
Jan292009

Enduring America on the Road Today

I'll be in Dublin today for a one-day conference, held by our partners at the Clinton Institute, on the US and the World after Bush. It should be an eye-opener on how diplomats in Europe, as well as top US academics, are perceiving the new Obama approach, US-European relations, and the global American position.

Updates today and early tomorrow on Obama foreign policy and on the Middle East will be limited, but Canuckistan is keeping an eye out for any major news and you can help us out with tips in the Comment section. Meanwhile, we've got some great analysis coming out today on Iraq, Turkish-Israeli relations, and Life Beyond Mars in South Miami Beach.
Wednesday
Jan282009

Bloggers Wanted

uncle_sam



Enduring America is on the lookout for new bloggers. Over the past couple of months our traffic has soared, and we're hoping some extra pairs of hands will allow us to offer an even better mixture of up-to-the-minute information on developing stories, daily news watches, and more in-depth analyses.

If you're interesting in blogging on Enduring America, we're interested in hearing from you- send us a pitch!

Tomorrow we have a great guest piece lined up for you, and we'll also have the latest posts from new blogger Ali.
Monday
Jan262009

New Twitter username

For those of you who follow Enduring America on Twitter, please note a change of username- @enduring is now @EANewsFeed. We've found we're now using Twitter much more as a way to provide up to the minute updates, with links to relevant posts on our site, so we hope  this name change will reflect that.

(Twitter users- this won't really change anything, please just start your replies @EANewsFeed now.)
Friday
Jan232009

Enduring America on The Instant Guide: The US Presidency

Technical problems delayed the posting of this programme, but still wanted to mention BBC World Service's Instant Guide, which offered a history of the US Presidency in preparation for the Obama Inauguration. It was a pleasure to contribute to the programme, especially in light of the history that was about to be made in Washington.

The link will be live until Saturday night.