Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada Can Pursue Trade Deal While Protecting Supply Management, Says Harper

The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2015 12:43 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says Canada will defend its supply management system for dairy and poultry while still pursuing one of the biggest trade deals in history.
     
    Harper made the comments after a government spokesman denied a published report suggesting the Trans-Pacific Partnership could destabilize the system that governs how dairy products and poultry are sold in Canada.
     
    "I believe these negotiations are going to establish what will become the basis of the international trading network in the Asia Pacific. It is essential in my view that Canada be part of that — that the Canadian economy be part of that," the prime minister told a news conference Thursday.
     
    "At the same time, we are working to protect our system of supply management and our farmers in other sectors."
     
    Canada always acts to protect the "interest of all of our sectors" in all trade talks, he added.
     
    "We will continue to do that right to the end of these negotiations."
     
    A Globe and Mail report quoted unidentified officials as saying Harper is resolved to signing the TPP even if it means a surge in imports of duty-free poultry and dairy products.
     
    A spokesman for International Trade Minister Ed Fast, however, says the federal government is committed to defending Canada's system of supply management.
     
    Rick Roth says the negotiations are ongoing and that an agreement will only be signed if it is in Canada's best interests.
     
    American negotiators want to pry open the tightly controlled Canadian dairy system that offers protection for the domestic industry, but results in higher prices at the grocery store and less foreign offerings.
     
    The sensitive spots in the trade pact for Canada include agriculture, and successive Canadian governments have left the dairy system alone for fear of incurring rural voters' wrath.
     
    The government is facing fierce lobbying from dairy and poultry farmers, who want Ottawa to resist making any concessions in the talks.
     
    The TPP includes 12 countries, including Canada, the U.S., Mexico and Japan, and covers about 40 per cent of the world's economy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dozens Of Police Officers Searching Site Almost A Year After B.C. Man Disappears

    Dozens Of Police Officers Searching Site Almost A Year After B.C. Man Disappears
    SAANICH, B.C. — More than 90 police officers are searching a parcel of land in rural Saanich, B.C., for any evidence connected to a possible murder.

    Dozens Of Police Officers Searching Site Almost A Year After B.C. Man Disappears

    Police Nix Judge's Order To Clean Jail Cells Of Feces, Vomit, Blood: Lawyer

    Police Nix Judge's Order To Clean Jail Cells Of Feces, Vomit, Blood: Lawyer
    Vancouver police refused to clean up their act even after reports of feces, vomit and blood smeared across jail-cell walls led a British Columbia judge to demand more hygienic lockup conditions for two prisoners, says a lawyer.

    Police Nix Judge's Order To Clean Jail Cells Of Feces, Vomit, Blood: Lawyer

    Kinder Morgan Says $100-million Investment Will Protect Against Oil Spills

    Kinder Morgan Says $100-million Investment Will Protect Against Oil Spills
    BURNABY, B.C. — Kinder Morgan is pledging to protect against any threat of oil spills caused by its Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, as opposition to the project mounts in British Columbia.

    Kinder Morgan Says $100-million Investment Will Protect Against Oil Spills

    Mount Polley Mine Could Reopen By End Of Month: B.C. Mines Minister

    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's energy and mines minister says a gold and copper mine that suffered a disastrous tailings pond collapse last summer could be back up and running by the end of the month.

    Mount Polley Mine Could Reopen By End Of Month: B.C. Mines Minister

    Man With A Knife Terrifies Woman On SkyTrain, Arrested In Surrey

    Man With A Knife Terrifies Woman On SkyTrain, Arrested In Surrey
    Transit Police say a 21-year-old knife-wielding man accused of threatening and stalking a woman on a SkyTrain faces several charges in a Surrey

    Man With A Knife Terrifies Woman On SkyTrain, Arrested In Surrey

    Four-Year-Old Boy Falls From Second-Story Balcony In Surrey, Miraculously Escapes Injury

    Four-Year-Old Boy Falls From Second-Story Balcony In Surrey, Miraculously Escapes Injury
    RCMP say officers and paramedics responded at around 3:30 p.m. Thursday to an apartment building in 14900-block of 105th Avenue, Surrey, B.C.

    Four-Year-Old Boy Falls From Second-Story Balcony In Surrey, Miraculously Escapes Injury