As border blockade persists, Canadians fear a pretext for more U.S. protectionism
WASHINGTON — Escalating blockades at the Canada-U.S. border are weakening one of the most fragile links in the vital North American supply chain — a link that has nothing to do with transport trucks, highways or bridges.
Rather, it’s the mood in the United States, particularly when it comes to issues like globalization, international trade and making things in America, that may pose the biggest danger over the long term.
Michigan Rep. Elissa Slotkin complained Wednesday about a General Motors plant outside Lansing that’s being starved of parts from Canada by the ongoing closure of the border crossing between Detroit and Windsor, Ont.
Her politically charged solution is the sort of thing that keeps Canadians up at night.