Hillary Clinton returns to Canada Wednesday for two speeches sponsored by a Canadian bank, but don’t expect her to say too much on the Keystone pipeline, the elephant in the room when it comes to relations between the U.S. and our neighbors to the north.
Clinton will speak to an expected crowd of about 2,000 at the Winnipeg Convention Centre at 1 p.m., before heading to Saskatoon to give a similar speech.
Both speeches are part of the Global Perspectives series, sponsored by Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, whose head will interview Clinton on stage in Winnipeg. The bank is perhaps best known in the U.S. for its role in the Enron scandal.
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The local press has focused on whether Clinton will address Keystone, which would bring tar sands oil from neighboring Alberta through the middle of the U.S. to ports and refineries on the Gulf Coast.
The former secretary of state has thus far steered clear of the issue, so as not to prejudice the ongoing review process at the State Department. There’s also little political upside in coming down either way on the controversial issue while she considers running for president in 2016.
But she can expect to asked about it Wednesday, as the issue is almost unavoidable when it comes it come to relations between the two North American countries.
And as with many things in the Clintons’ vast network of friends spanning business and politics, she has a personal connection to the issue.
Gordon Giffin, a longtime Clinton donor who served as ambassador to Canada under Bill Clinton, is on the board of directors of the CIBC, the bank sponsoring Clinton’s appearance, and has lobbied for the company hoping to build the Keystone pipeline.
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Giffin, who as a “Hillraiser” bundler for Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign and has donated $1,000 to the pro-Clinton super PAC Ready for Hillary, is a lawyer specializing in international energy issues. His firm was a registered lobbyist for Transcanada for several years, and Giffin personally lobbied for the company trying to build Keystone pipeline in 2007 and 2008, according to Senate ethics records. Transcanada did not fully takeover the Keystone pipeline until 2009.









