Thursday, June 25, 2026
ADVT 
National

Alghabra senses 'shift' in Canada-U.S. relations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 May, 2022 09:52 AM
  • Alghabra senses 'shift' in Canada-U.S. relations

WASHINGTON - Transport Minister Omar Alghabra says he is detecting a positive "shift" in the Biden administration's approach to Canada following meetings in the U.S. capital.

Alghabra spent Tuesday in Washington, D.C., with officials including U.S. counterpart Pete Buttigieg and senior White House adviser Mitch Landrieu.

He says Russia's war in Ukraine has put a new frame around the administration's relationships with important trading partners, including Canada.

Alghabra says he reiterated Canada's opposition to President Joe Biden's original plan to put extra tax incentives on electric vehicles assembled in the U.S.

That version of the plan collapsed in December when Sen. Joe Manchin declared his opposition to Biden's $2-trillion Build Back Better bill.

The White House is working on a scaled-down version, but it remains unclear whether the tax credits, which Ottawa has warned would be a body blow to Canada's auto sector, will return in their original form.

"There is, I think, a new frame for the conversations that are taking place in the U.S.," Alghabra said in an interview.

"While I don't know what the future of the previous EV tax credit is in the U.S., I am hopeful that I think now we're entering into a new type of discussion."

Manchin, the moderate Democrat from West Virginia who has emerged as a key vote in the evenly divided Senate, suggested recently that he would not support any measure that would harm Canada's auto industry.

Manchin, who heads the Senate's energy and natural resources committee, hosted Jason Kenney when the Alberta premier testified in person on Capitol Hill earlier this month.

The pair have become cross-border allies as the U.S. looks for ways to both combat inflation while reducing its dependence on fossil fuels from hostile regimes, while Kenney continues to prod the Biden administration to depend more on Canada for its short-term energy needs.

After the May 17 hearing, Manchin said he expects the White House is still working on some sort of a program to encourage American consumers to buy more electric vehicles and ease U.S. dependence on gasoline.

But he insisted that he wouldn't support any measure that would hurt automakers north of the border.

"There's no way in the world that we're going to put that type of harm and allow that to happen," Manchin said. "My vote would never support that at all."

Manchin and Kenney both voiced support for the idea of a more closely integrated Canada-U.S. energy "alliance." It would focus on the need for traditional energy in the short term, as well as reliable bilateral supply chains for the critical minerals so essential to the production of electric vehicles.

Alghabra said the role Canada could play in buttressing U.S. supply chains for those minerals is also generating increased interest south of the border.

"We have more of those critical minerals, and some types of the critical minerals that the U.S. doesn't have," he said.

"There's a new sense of interest and intrigue about this new frame that I think maybe did not exist last year."

MORE National ARTICLES

Security guard killed at UBC Okanagan identified as Harmandeep Kaur

Security guard killed at UBC Okanagan identified as Harmandeep Kaur
Harmandeep Kaur was an International student and had just received her Permanent Residency card 3 weeks ago. She wanted to pursue a career as a paramedic. 

Security guard killed at UBC Okanagan identified as Harmandeep Kaur

WATCH: Billionaire Businessman Bob Gaglardi donates $10M to Thompson Rivers University

WATCH: Billionaire Businessman Bob Gaglardi donates $10M to Thompson Rivers University
Gaglardi is the name behind Northland Properties, a global company under whose flagship are some of the most well known hotel chains, restaurants, and sports bars.    

WATCH: Billionaire Businessman Bob Gaglardi donates $10M to Thompson Rivers University

Russian oligarchs in Canada targeted: Freeland

Russian oligarchs in Canada targeted: Freeland
Freeland said any future pain would be far worse for European countries, which are heavily dependent on Russian oil and gas and have deeper economic ties with Russia than Canada. Freeland did not single out any specific Russian business interests.

Russian oligarchs in Canada targeted: Freeland

Suspect in poppy donation box theft arrested, faces multiple charges

Suspect in poppy donation box theft arrested, faces multiple charges
Last November, just days before Remembrance Day, three poppy donation boxes were stolen in North Burnaby. Burnaby RCMP released video and photos of the suspect. Police identified a suspect quite quickly and a warrant was issued for a 57-year-old man with no known fixed address.

Suspect in poppy donation box theft arrested, faces multiple charges

Freeland says new sanctions coming on Russia

Freeland says new sanctions coming on Russia
Freeland says she spoke with her G7 counterparts this morning, joined by Ukraine's "tired but determined" finance minister, who assured them his country would win the war as he spoke from a windowless room furnished with a spartan cot and a blue and yellow flag taped to the wall.

Freeland says new sanctions coming on Russia

B.C. could drop more COVID restrictions: top doc

B.C. could drop more COVID restrictions: top doc
Dr. Bonnie Henry says a decline in hospitalizations, immunity from vaccination and the availability of at-home rapid tests point the way forward to normal activities like high school graduations that youth in particular need to feel connected to others.

B.C. could drop more COVID restrictions: top doc