Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
International

Biden to finally visit Canada March 23-24

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Mar, 2023 06:19 PM
  • Biden to finally visit Canada March 23-24

WASHINGTON - U.S. President Joe Biden will travel to Ottawa on March 23 to meet with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Canadian soil, his first visit north of the border since taking the oath of office in 2021.

The president and his wife Jill Biden will spend two days in Canada, the White House confirmed Thursday, although a detailed itinerary has not yet been released.

The two leaders will discuss ongoing upgrades to the aging, jointly led Norad continental defence system, which came under heavy scrutiny last month when a Chinese surveillance balloon drifted through U.S. and Canadian airspace.

Fears, too, about unchecked Russian aggression and the ability of the two countries to defend the continent's northern frontier have only accelerated in the year since the start of Vladimir Putin's bloody invasion of Ukraine.

"Keeping North Americans safe from new and emerging threats requires a co-ordinated response," the Prime Minister's Office said in a statement.

"During the visit, the prime minister and the president will highlight ongoing co-operation on continental defence, including Norad's key role in defending North America. They will also advance co-operation in the Arctic."

The two leaders also plan to talk about how to fortify shared supply chains, combat climate change and "accelerate the clean energy transition," the White House said.

One of the likely highlights of the visit will come when Biden addresses a joint session of Parliament "to highlight the importance of the United States-Canada bilateral relationship," said press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.

A visit to Canada is customarily one of a new U.S. president's first foreign trips, a tradition upended two years ago by the COVID-19 pandemic. Like the rest of the world at the time, the two leaders settled for a virtual meeting instead.

The virus interfered in Canada-U.S. relations again in 2022, when Biden tested positive for COVID a second time, forcing the White House to scrap its plan for a summertime visit.

Delayed though it may be, it will be an important bilateral meeting for both countries, said Scotty Greenwood, CEO of the Canadian American Business Council.

"It's an occasion which focuses a bureaucracy on the breadth and depth of bilateral and multilateral issues … and that's a really good thing, because it causes everybody here to focus on Canada," Greenwood said.

"It also allows the president himself to think about and reflect on Canada in the context of all the other global relationships the U.S. has, and that can be a very good thing."

In the end, however, it's essential that the federal government in Ottawa make the most of the opportunity, she added.

"The extent to which Canada wants to lean in and try to help solve some of the pain points the U.S. has is a good opportunity for Canada," Greenwood said. "We won't know until the visit happens if Canada wants to do that."

As always, the two leaders have a lot to talk about — much of it a direct offshoot of the pandemic as both countries recalibrate their domestic and international supply chains, bilateral travel rules and economic recovery efforts, all of it with an eye toward arresting the march of climate change around the world.

Strategies to minimize dependence on China for critical minerals and semiconductors, two vital components in the global push to expand the popularity of electric vehicles and fuel what some experts liken to a post-pandemic industrial revolution, are sure to be high on the agenda.

So too will be a united front in opposing Russia's offensive in Ukraine, as well as what to do about Haiti, where Canada is facing international pressure to take a lead role in quelling widespread and rampant gang violence.

The PMO statement emphasized a familiar Trudeau message on Haiti: that efforts to deal with the crisis should be "Haitian-led."

There will be bilateral tensions to address as well.

The post-NAFTA era, where the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement is now the law of the land in continental trade, has been marked by irritants, including access to Canada's dairy market and how the U.S. defines foreign content in autos.

Immigration has also become a hot topic: while Republican lawmakers usually have a singular focus on the flow of migrants across the U.S.-Mexico border, a spike in the number of people entering from Canada has also caught their eye.

Trudeau has publicly acknowledged that the two countries need to renegotiate the 2004 Safe Third Country Agreement in order to staunch the flow of irregular migration into Canada, but there's little appetite in the U.S. to do so.

Even so-called trusted travellers are having a harder time than they did before the pandemic, with the fast-track program known as Nexus having been hampered by a cross-border jurisdictional squabble.

The White House said "irregular migration and forced displacement throughout the region" would be on the agenda, but offered no other details. The PMO mentioned only "immigration." Neither mentioned the treaty.

Biden's speech to Parliament will follow in the footsteps of his former boss, then-president Barack Obama, who made a similar address when he last visited Ottawa in June of 2016.

Biden himself visited the national capital in December of that year, as Obama's second term was winding down and the world was bracing for the inauguration of his Republican successor, Donald Trump.

"I know sometimes we're like the big brother that's a pain in the neck and overbearing … but we're more like family, even, than allies," the vice-president at the time said during a state dinner in his honour.

He cheered Canada's role in defending and strengthening what he called a "liberal international order" amid the rise of authoritarianism around the world, perhaps sensing what the next four years had in store.

"We're going to get through this period because we're Americans and Canadians, and so had I a glass I'd toast you by saying, 'Vive le Canada,' because we need you very, very badly."

MORE International ARTICLES

UK PM Liz Truss has told staff she expects them to wear ties and smarten up

UK PM Liz Truss has told staff she expects them to wear ties and smarten up
The Prime Minister has made it clear with officials that the unbuttoned collars and laid-back atmosphere in Downing Street both left with Boris Johnson, Daily Mail reported. During Johnson's time at No 10, he was often viewed as a scruffy dresser and his controversial chief of staff Dominic Cummings was notorious for wearing shabby outfits.

UK PM Liz Truss has told staff she expects them to wear ties and smarten up

UN chief to appeal for 'massive support' for Pakistan

UN chief to appeal for 'massive support' for Pakistan
Over 1.1 million houses have been damaged and some 560,000 houses have been destroyed. Over 630,000 men, women and children are reportedly living in relief camps across Pakistan, most of them in Sindh. Many more displaced people are living with host communities.

UN chief to appeal for 'massive support' for Pakistan

2 killed, 1 injured as raging California wildfire continues to grow

2 killed, 1 injured as raging California wildfire continues to grow
The two victims of the fire appeared to be attempting to flee before being overcome by the blaze, officials said in a media briefing Tuesday morning. Due to the blaze, all schools in Hemet Unified School District will be closed on Tuesday. School district officials said in a statement that the decision "was not made lightly."

2 killed, 1 injured as raging California wildfire continues to grow

Classmate recalls U.K. PM Truss' B.C. school days

Classmate recalls U.K. PM Truss' B.C. school days
Truss had shared the same photo on Instagram and Twitter to mark Canada Day in 2018. "30 years ago, I spent a year in Canada that changed my outlook on life," wrote Truss, who included the hashtags "CanadaDay," "maplespirit" and "pioneercountry."

Classmate recalls U.K. PM Truss' B.C. school days

Sunak, Patel doubtful to be included in Truss cabinet

Sunak, Patel doubtful to be included in Truss cabinet
The Guardian newspaper maintained Truss will pack her cabinet with loyalists and there was unlikely to be any place in it for her defeated opponent in the 8-week race for the premiership Rishi Sunak, who is of Indian extraction. It reported that Kwasi Kwarteng could replace him as Chancellor of the Exchequer. Meanwhile, Sunak extended his 'full support' to Truss.  

Sunak, Patel doubtful to be included in Truss cabinet

Flood situation in Pak highly likely to boost disease spread: WHO

Flood situation in Pak highly likely to boost disease spread: WHO
The most affected province is Sindh, followed by Balochistan. As of August 25, more than 33 million people have been affected and over 6.4 million people are in dire need of humanitarian aid, including 421,000 refugees, the WHO report highlighted. 

Flood situation in Pak highly likely to boost disease spread: WHO