Now is the time for ambitious pols to be looking ahead to the 2016 presidential election — nevermind that the midterms are barely in the rearview mirror. The desire to hold the nation’s top office has several would-be candidates flocking to an unlikely destination: Canada.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie flies to Calgary on Thursday before making stops in Toronto and Ottawa on Friday. The trip is being billed as a trade mission in which the Republican will meet with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and it comes just three months after the Garden State governor urged that the controversial Keystone XL pipeline “be done today.”
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Christie is also expected to give an energy policy speech north of the border in which he’ll aggressively trumpet the pipeline, which would create an oil transport system from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. Proponents of Keystone — mainly labor unions, oil companies, and Republicans — argue the plan would create thousands of jobs and make the U.S. less dependent on oil from the Middle East. Critics believe the project would release dangerous greenhouse gas emissions, would not bring in significant numbers of new jobs, and would have no effect on U.S. gas prices.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, announced earlier this week that she would be headlining two events on Jan. 21 — one in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and another in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, sponsored by mega bank CIBC. Notably, Clinton has been skewered by both Democrats and Republicans alike for not taking a firm position on Keystone.
And then there’s outgoing Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley – a potential dark horse presidential candidate who would serve as a liberal alternative to Clinton, should either officially decide to run. The Democrat, an outspoken critic of Keystone, was in Ottawa late last month for an event sponsored by the progressive think tank Canada 2020. O’Malley also met with foreign affairs minister John Baird.
With three different stances, Clinton, Christie and O’Malley’s visits surely can’t all be about Keystone. So why are they all heading north?
For Clinton, the trips are likely in part to make money. Tickets to the Manitoba event start at $285 and her speaking fees have generally run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. But it’s also a way for Clinton to talk up her experience at the State Department in a country that clearly loves the former first lady. Clinton has headlined six events in the country since June 2013.
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Stephen R. Kelly, a visiting professor at Duke University’s Sanford School of Public Policy and former director of Canadian Studies at the school, said Clinton also has the benefit of Canadians loving her husband, former president Bill Clinton, during his time in office. “She was favorably identified as secretary of state and for working with allies and institutions. She brings a lot to the table that Canadians would like to see in an American president, in comparison to the largely indifferent ‘we-like-you-guys-but-we have-other-things-to-do’ approach of President Obama.
According to Munroe Eagles, the director of Canadian Studies at the University at Buffalo, SUNY, Clinton “hardly needs this exposure” and doesn’t have much to gain by taking a public stance on Keystone by coming to Canada.
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“I suspect that something else, and potentially something larger, is behind her travels. Two things come to mind: First, she has been an advocate of a broad coalition addressing the ISIS threat — and she sees Canada as a key part of that effort. Second, earlier this year, she noted that Canada was pulling ahead of the U.S. on some quality of life measures. So she may be interested in using the Canadian experience to advance her policy agenda,” said Eagles.









