Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Thicker Canada-US Border Unlikely Under Trump, Ex-Security Czar Predicts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Nov, 2016 12:34 PM
    TORONTO — The Canada-U.S. border is unlikely to see any thickening under president-elect Donald Trump despite the Republican's protectionist campaign rhetoric, former American security czar Tom Ridge said Tuesday.
     
    While Trump's views on Mexican migrants and Syrian refugees appeared to be sharply at odds with Canada's approach, Ridge said Canada needs to take a deep breath and wait to see what actually emerges from a Trump administration.
     
    Ridge, appointed as first Homeland Security secretary in the aftermath of the 9-11 attacks on the United States, was fiercely critical of the campaigning Trump, denouncing his "bumper-sticker approach" to policy and a bombastic tone that "reflects the traits of a bully."
     
    Now that the campaign is over, Ridge said he hoped Trump would "substantially alter his approach" to borders.
     
    "There's always a difference between the political rhetoric and actually the governing posture that he takes," Ridge told The Canadian Press in an interview.
     
    "There'll be strong and countervailing influences on some of these issues within the legislative branch as well."
     
    Ridge said it's important to watch who Trump appoints to his cabinet before drawing any conclusions about policy directions.
     
    One thing is certain, he said, Trump won't be building a wall between the U.S. and Mexico as he famously pledged to do during the campaign.
     
     
    "Let's not be so arrogant to think that everybody who crosses our border from the south wants to be a citizen," Ridge said. "We're not going to build the wall."
     
    Either way, he said, Trump's pronouncements have tended to be about the border with Mexico, not with Canada. He also suggested the U.S.'s northern border could be a model for Trump.
     
    Any thickening of the northern border in particular would be a "huge mistake" given the critical relationship Canada and the United States have, he said.
     
    "If you want to look at a relationship that has proven to be very sensitive to the needs of both countries, and the culture of both countries, take a look at the Canada-U.S. border."
     
    One piece of advice he would offer the incoming president is to make Canada the destination for his first foreign visit.
     
    "There's a very unique and very special relationship and I would hope at the very outset that he recognizes that with his first foreign trip," Ridge said. "That would be very important for both countries."
     
    Trump might also want to dust off and revive the "smart border accord" he and former deputy prime minister John Manley forged years ago, Ridge said.
     
     
    The former governor who now runs a cybersecurity company was in Toronto for a conference at which he warned of the increasing threat to critical public and private infrastructure posed by hackers from foreign states such as China as well as from organized crime.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Pedaling Surrey Police Officer Completes Tour De Valley

    Pedaling Surrey Police Officer Completes Tour De Valley
    Cycling has always been a passion for Surrey RCMP Constable Alexandre Levesque. When he heard about the Cops for Cancer Tour de Valley, he jumped at the chance to combine his love of biking with his role as a police officer, all for an important cause.

    Pedaling Surrey Police Officer Completes Tour De Valley

    Two Arrests Made In Two Separate Homicide Cases In Vancouver

    Two Arrests Made In Two Separate Homicide Cases In Vancouver
    Police say the body of a man was found on the property of a West End mansion shortly before 7 p.m. on Wednesday.

    Two Arrests Made In Two Separate Homicide Cases In Vancouver

    Search To Resume For 65-year-old Hiker On Vancouver's North Shore Mountains

    Search To Resume For 65-year-old Hiker On Vancouver's North Shore Mountains
    VANCOUVER — An air and ground search Thursday found no trace of a hiker missing on the mountains of Vancouver's North Shore but rescuers expected to be back on the trails Friday morning, looking for any clues.

    Search To Resume For 65-year-old Hiker On Vancouver's North Shore Mountains

    Samsung Working With Health Canada To Address Potential Risk From Washers

    Samsung Working With Health Canada To Address Potential Risk From Washers
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — Samsung says it is working with Health Canada to address potential safety issues with certain top-loading, high-efficiency washing machines that can vibrate to the point where they could pose a risk of injury or property damage.

    Samsung Working With Health Canada To Address Potential Risk From Washers

    Military Aircraft Searching For Small Plane Reported Missing Near Yellowknife

    Military Aircraft Searching For Small Plane Reported Missing Near Yellowknife
    An Air Force spokesman says the last known position of the aircraft on Thursday evening was about 90 kilometres northeast of Yellowknife near Gordon Lake.

    Military Aircraft Searching For Small Plane Reported Missing Near Yellowknife

    Canoeing, Fishing Planned As Royal Tour Heads To Coastal Islands Of Haida Gwaii

    Canoeing, Fishing Planned As Royal Tour Heads To Coastal Islands Of Haida Gwaii
    HAIDA GWAII, B.C. — First Nations art and a coastal fishing trip are on the itinerary for the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge as they spend their final full day in Canada at the remote West Coast archipelago of Haida Gwaii.

    Canoeing, Fishing Planned As Royal Tour Heads To Coastal Islands Of Haida Gwaii