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Prime Minister Stephen Harper is greeted by U.S. Secretary of State for Wales Paul Murphy and High Commissioner of the United Kingdom James Wright (centre) as he arrives in London, England Tuesday, March 31, 2009. (Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS) U.S. President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama wave as they disembark Air Force One at London's Stansted International Airport, Tuesday, March 31, 2009. (AP / Charles Dharapak) A police officer monitors CCTV screens showing prominent areas in London, at a police control room in London, Tuesday, March 31, 2009. World leaders are gathering in London for the G20 summit amid an unprecedented security operation to protect the meeting from violent protests and terrorists. (AP / Kirsty Wigglesworth) Prime Minister Stephen Harper waves with wife Laureen, son Ben and daughter Rachel as they leave for London from the Ottawa International Airport on Tuesday, March 31, 2009. (Sean Kilpatrick  / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

Harper, Obama arrive in London for G20 summit

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CTV News Video

CTV News: Robert Fife on the G20 meeting
Many European countries are concerned about the massive increases in worldwide government stimulus spending, and French President Nicolas Sarkozy has threatened to walk out of the meeting if an agreement can't be made on tougher regulations for banks.
CTV Newsnet: Patrick Lablond, University of Ottawa, explains why Canada is considered a 'second tier' nation
An international affairs expert says Canada will have little influence at the summit. Even before the gathering, this country was relegated to a second tier of nations and was even left off a internal British memo outlining the most important nations to lobby.
Power Play: CTV's Robert Fife and Tom Kennedy and Richard Burt, Former U.S. chief START Negotiator
Canada is expected to be one of the model countries for economic stability at the G20 meeting in London, an event that expects protests from a number of groups.
CTV Newsnet: London Bureau Chief Tom Kennedy on the expectation that funds for the IMF will be increased
World leaders are expected to focus on the global economic crisis at the meeting, and agreements are expected on increasing funding for the IMF and clamping down on tax havens, but not necessarily on stimulus plans.
CTV Newsnet: Tom Velk, McGill University, outlines the leading role Canada can play at the G20 summit
Canada has a real change to be a bridge builder between European countries and others those who don't agree with the big Obama spending plans. With a good financial system, the PM may be able shift emphasis to how to create a healthier financial community.

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Date: Tue. Mar. 31 2009 10:06 PM ET

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has landed in London to meet with G20 leaders for discussions on how to restore the struggling global economy.

U.S. President Barack Obama, and other leaders, also arrived Tuesday night for the emergency summit meeting in search of an economic silver bullet.

There some significant disagreement between G20 leaders on what is the solution for the flailing global economy. The U.S. and the U.K. want more stimulus spending, while mainland Europe prefers more regulation for the financial sector.

CTV's London Bureau Chief Tom Kennedy told Power Play "the President of France (Nicolas Sarkozy) has implied that he will walk out of this summit if there is too much talk about economic stimulus and not enough talk about the root of what he describes as the real problem, (Anglo-American) bankers."

The meetings will be Obama's first major test on the global stage as president. But he can expect to find resistance on his economic strategy.

"There are significant differences on that key issue (of stimulus,)" Kennedy said, also citing the German chancellor and Czech prime minister as politicians who are opposed to more stimulus spending.

World leaders will also discuss giving more cash to the IMF and the World Bank to help developing countries make it through the global recession.

However, the Canadian government says such aid is "secondary."

"No amount of foreign aid and assistance will be sufficient," Harper's spokesman, Kory Teneycke, said at a pre-summit media briefing.

Kennedy said an agreement already seems in place for the G20 to stamp out international tax havens, which wealthy citizens can use to hide income from their government.

Obama, Harper speak

Prior to his departure, Harper spoke with Obama about their shared priorities going into the summit.

The two leaders also spoke about the auto sector and the upcoming NATO summit, which kicks off in France on Friday.

At the G20 meeting, which begins Wednesday, Harper is expected to tout Canada's prudent economic policy.

In an interview with CNN Monday, Harper said Canada was criticized a few years ago for not deregulating banks but he said that has now helped make Canadian banks among the strongest in the world.

Teneycke said the best solution is to restore global economic growth through better financial regulation, freer trade and dealing with toxic assets.

The G20, which includes China, Russia and India, comprises 90 per cent of world trade.

It also boasts more than 80 per cent of economic output and two thirds of the global population.

Major protest expected

Kennedy said that protesters are expected and Wednesday has been designated "Financial Fool's Day" by activists in London.

The security for the conference is being referred to as the most sophisticated to ever take place in London.

"They are not sparing any hyperbole to describe about what is going to happening here over the next few days," Kennedy said. "They are calling it the 'summit to save the world,' so the security around it is enormous."

On Friday, both Harper and Obama will be attending the NATO summit in Strasbourg, France.

The focus there will be on the mission in Afghanistan.

During his trip, Obama is also expected to visit with the Queen at Buckingham Palace and make a trip to Turkey.

With files from The Canadian Press

Comments are now closed for this story

Walter (Winnipeg)
said

Regulus de Leo

I certainly agree with you on this. No Prime Minister is perfect - but Harper might be the closest to it.


Regulus de Leo
said

Harper is someone who really makes me proud to be a Canadian and I see it when he speaks to US networks and appears on the world stage. He's experienced, reasonable and articulate. Martin and Chretien were an embarrassment, always playing on cheap anti-American sentiments that did our country no good. And Harper can teach the inexperienced Obama a thing or two!


Niagara George
said

Steve is in his glory now! This is why he is Prime Minister.

He will do anything to stay on the world stage. You can be certain he will continue to reject all his past beliefs to still be PM during the Olympics.

Some have said the Liberals are desperate for power. The truth is that no PM in Canadian history has gone against his own belief system the way this man has.

The leaders of other nations know this and can see this little man for who he really is. Let's hope for the next election enough Canadians can see it, as well.


Bud
said

Harper is doing a great job. All the Liberals do is pander to the Special Inrerest Groups and the French Canadiens! Wish Steve had of got a Majority Gov't.
Next Time maybe!!


grace gower
said

I am very proud of Prime Minister Harper. He shines on the world stage, and is respected by other world leaders. His family is also a lovely addition, he seems like a good man.


shirley
said

I think that the money spent to send Harper & Obama & whom ever else that attends the G7 summit meeting could be better spent with each of the presidents redistributing the money to help the people in Canada & USA.


shirley
said

I think that the money spent to send Harper & Obama & whom ever else that attends the G7 summit meeting could be better spent with each of the presidents redistributing the money to help the people in Canada & USA.


OC in TO
said

Andy from Edmonton nailed it. As much as I disliked Mulroney at the time, there's little doubt that his two biggest policies (GST and Free Trade) boosted us in ways that the Chretien/Martin gov't could later work well with. Martin then made choices & decisions that in retrospect were downright brilliant. Yes, he was horribly out-of-place as Prime Minister, but Martin's period as Finance Minister is nowadays worthy of a hero's reception -- we should be thanking him daily.

As to Prime Minister Harper, I'm not a fan, but he deserves our respect and so far has not made serious changes to the overall economic structure laid-out under Martin's Finance period. I personally would've rather seen him break his GST-cut promise, but beyond that I don't see any reason why he shouldn't now crow globally about our banks and finances -- even if he may have wanted different regulatory scenarios for those banks back in the day. He's the Prime Minister, we're doing better than other countries, it's his rightful place to show off that success and suggest actions to others based on what we've done right. Let's stop with the political left-right, right-wrong shenanigans people -- now is not the time for that kind of b.s.; now's the time for best-practices and successful methodologies to be put into practice, regardless of which political bent implemented it. Heck -- that's what this whole G20 summit is about -- finding answers and figuring out what's working best!

(However, I also have to agree that his going on Fox days after their insult to our military was problematic -- I'd've liked to have seen him give them a wee dressing-down for their comments.)


Lloyd
said

the President of France (Nicolas Sarkozy) has implied that he will walk out of this summit if there is too much talk about economic stimulus and not enough talk about the root of what he describes as the real problem, (Anglo-American) bankers."

I say let him WALK.



Canada Goose Whistler
said

Oh boy! We all know what Harper is going to say.
He'll tell the world leader to gamble their countries economy on the stock market, there are some good deals out there. Then he will tell them that the USA has to fix their banking problem before anyone Canada can recover. He will tell them Canada banks are strong. He won't tell them that he was pushing to make them more like the USA banks. But he will tell them to scrap their gun registry so criminals have easier access to guns.
Never in my life have I felt so embarrassed for Canada as I have with Harper at the helm.



AlbertaBoy111
said

I love how he tries to make it sound like he never wanted to de-regulate the banks.


Norma
said

Amazing to see our education tax dollars at work supplying a first hand economic learning experience for the Harper children. And I suppose Mom is along to make sure they do their homework. All on our tax dollars. Where do I sign up to send my children along next time? Time they learned to budget the money we don't have.


Rob
said

Good job Harper!


Steve in Vancouver
said

I guess at some point Mr. Harper should thank Liberal Paul Martin for the stability of our banking system during these tough times. Hmmmm!!!!


Andrea
said

Lets just cross our two fingers, and hope Harper does not embarrass Canada at an international event.


crazydragons
said

Does anyone (besides the United States) care about NATO anymore?

NATO has been obsolete since 1992. We really don't need it today...


Andy from Edmonton
said

Dianne:

I agree that Martin as Finance Minister did a good job (he was a HORRIBLE PM), and that the Harper government is benefiting from some of those decisions.

Let us not forget though, who set the basis for the Liberals to do a good fiscal job, and that was the Mulroney government.

Without NAFTA and the GST (much hated as it is), the Liberals could not have performed financially as well as they did. Chretien's promise to axe the tax was an empty one, and once he realized the amount of funds it brought to the federal Treasury, he backed off.

Let us not be partisan on financial issues; Mulroney built the foundation for Canada's well being, Chretien/Martin expanded on it, and Harper has had the wisdom to continue it.

We can argue about all sorts of other issues, but both the Conservatives and Liberals since Mulroney have over all done a better job then other countries.


Cambob
said

It's too bad Dion isn't Prime Minister now. He could go over and babble on about some kind of massive green tax while Layton seizes parliament and retroactivly taxes all Canadians 110% on all income and expenses. Well, all Canadians except Quebecers and union members.

Yeah, we came THAT close to the Coalition...


northerngal
said

At least Harper has lived, worked and paid taxes in
Canada for the past 25 years. The so-called Liberal
leader has been working, living and paying taxes to
other countries for the past
25 years. Who is best to
represent this great Country???


Frank
said

I'm tired to see the Governments to try and bailout the Banks and Companies that have put the ECONOMY in trouble. More money for them will only be going in their pockets and not to the people as it should.

Here is a bailout plan: Give every Canadian $2000.00 each bonus. Not tax deductable; no deduction - straight forward $2000.00. In my case, since I have a wife and 3 children, I would get $10 000.00.

We would then spend it on trips, entertainment systems, new car, down payment of a new home, ect... to sitmulate the circulation of currency.

With $2000.00 each at an estimated population of 34 million people it would be a package cost of $68 billion. Far less than what USA's bailout plan is.

It could be crazy idea but it it could work.


Gail (Hamilton)
said

The one area where PM Harper disagrees with Pres Obama, is spending trillions of dollars to get out of economic downturn (an opinion shared by Germany, France and other countries). PM Harper isn't into nationalizing corporations either. I'm proud of our PM on the world stage, and with Russia and China there, we need his strong leadership skills. People who disagree always seem to use general terms like "most economists disagree" or personal attacks that show political bias. At least respect the office of Prime Minister.


Our Prime Minister - An Expert?
said

How did Harper become an economic expert? Let's do an honest check here. He could not (or would not) project a deficit 3 months before it happened. He was firmly against the financial regulations that saved our Canadian banks - accidentally.
His current message is that we have to all wait for the U.S. to recover. His policies have encouraged a one income country based on oil and exploitation of resources.
The integrity of our Prime Minister is unfortunately very low. Approximately 30% of Canadians are either unaware or more worried about messaging than to face some hard facts on this.
Canada is becoming known as a country that uses censorship, abandons its own citizens and continually lies about everything from constitutional issues to the realities of the economy.
who is going to listen to this? Perhaps he can speak about abandoning your own values in the face of trouble? On that topic he does have credibility.
And for the record, the Liberals and NDP do not seem to be anxious to change it.


Fraser
said

James you really need to get some of your facts straight.
James
“On that note, it was Martin who help pay down Canada's debt and reduce Canada's Dept to GDP ratio from 70% to 50%".

Yes, we all know how the liberal heroes did that by dipping into the E.I. fund. It sure takes a rocket scientist to accomplish that.



Pat - Toronto
said

I agree with Tony .. but, James, what we all need to remember, even though Paul Martin was a great financier he did make most of his great accomplishments on the backs of our own money.. while Chretien and his buddies were robbing us blind. I am proud of Stephen Harper and so should we all be.. he is trying to make things better for us as he also fights the economy. It is refreshing to have a leader who is honest and we should be grateful for that.


Spenc from BC
said

Definition of a Pavlovian Liberal:

Hate reflex is triggered when ever Harper is mentioned in the press.


Come on everybody pile on the irrational hate now. Follow the stimulus!


Please don't let Harper embarrass Canada again.
said

Having such an inept ideologue bumbling and stumbling on the world stage humiliates Canadians.


Red X
said

I read some of what Harper said on Fox. Something about Canada being the first to get out of the recession. Boasting that we won't have "structural deficits"
Low corporate taxes by 2012...

That means we WILL have structural deficits because companies not making money will not get corporate tax breaks while the G20 summiteers wait for the U$ to get out of its economic woes by ... 2010/2011?!


Ken - Calgary
said

I agree with Phil - it's time for Harper to take his place where he rightly belongs! On the unemployment line!


guppies
said

Are we paying for his wife and kids too ?

Wonder is this a Business trip or is a spring break holiday.

When I go for a business trip. MY company that I work for. They don't paid for my family to go there.

Sorry, Harper that's o.k
It only cost us a few $ more no big deal. You been throwing away our tax $ away in "B"


Jill- Negative Liberal Party Members left at home.
said

This should be a good meeting, leaving the negative Liberal Party members at home is the best idea yet. Harper and Obama offer hope to the world and thats what we want.


Lionel - Harper and Obama Buddies
said

Harper & Obama are friends, after leaving the Liberal leader sitting at the airport while he went cooking shopping its a good thing Harper is the PM.


Jim- Canada is Back and Shinning like brand new
said

Prime Minister Harper is very well respected in the world. Finally after 13 embarssing years we are back to the Mulroney days when Canada was the most loved Nation in the world.


PepperPot
said

Finally we are in a position and have a leader that will represent Canada well on the world scene. Well done Mr. Harper. With previous governments and their squandering of defense dollars we looked like a retarded cousin of USA. all that has changed and we have returned to the image we had after WW2 - we do deserve to be on the world stage.


mollyf
said

Good to see this. I am proud of our PM. He is selling Canada and he remains upbeat, it's a lessson for us all.


Walking Man
said

First Harper/I wanna be a president, bamboozles Canada to get elected. Now he's trying to do the same on the world stage?

This guy will stop at nothing to get noticed. Slippery as an eel and rides on everybody else's thunder.. Sheesh!


CindyJ
said

Diane, Toronto Dominion Bank and Canada Trust merged early 2000. Perhaps you should take a look and decide how badly that turned out. I believe that recently TD Canada Trust was rated as the second soundest banking institution in North America. There is far more to Bank regulations than mergers and mergers are not necessarily bad.


Dianne
said

Remember when the banks wanted to merge? Royal Bank of Canada + Bank of Montreal and Toronto Dominion + Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce?

What stopped the mergers & deregulation?

The 'Financial Institution Policy Framework' released June 2000, & the Legislation given Royal Assent in Parliament in 2001. At that time the Rt. Hon. Paul Martin, then Finance Minister, said: "Mergers of RBC + B of M & TD + CIBC were not allowed to proceed as the mergers were not in the interests of Canadians".

The Rt. Hon. Paul Martin oversaw many changes in financial structure, his policies had a direct effect on eliminating the country's chronic fiscal DEFICIT by reforming various programs including social services, and a Canada Pension Plan overhaul averting a pension crisis if unaddressed.

The USA went the other way & now have to do what Canada did in the 90's & 60's, institute banking regulation, reform Social Security & implement a Health Care System.

The Rt. Hon. Paul Martin as Finance Minister from 1993 to 2002 set the stage for Canada to weather the current economic crisis now before the World.

The Rt. Hon. Stephen Harper had nothing to do with it. We can only hope he doesn't screw up.

Mr. Harper states "We're emerging from this (recession) with probably the only truly free-market financial system in the World". Yes, Mr. Harper, and that is THANKS to Mr. Martin.

And, pray tell, what are you doing on the FOX Network when last weekend they made fun of our military as 4 bodies of our brave soldiers were being shipped home from Afghanistan in coffins? And, don't say you didn't know about the FOX ridicule because the Hon. Peter McKay criticized FOX for their tirade.




DosaIsay
said

James..in case you forgot the Liberal era..

After that, everything changed. The years from fiscal 1976 to fiscal 1985 were, fiscally speaking, a lost decade: ten straight years in which the government ran not only an overall deficit, but an operating deficit. The overall deficit throughout this later phase never fell below 3 per cent of GDP; it averaged 5.6 per cent. In that calamitous final year of Liberal rule, 1984-85, total spending exceeded revenues by more than 50 per cent. The deficit that year, at $38.5-billion, was equal to nearly 9 per cent of GDP, a record in peacetime. Interest payments alone were now enough to consume nearly one-third of every revenue dollar




Jeff the T'DOT
said

Hey Terri,
If you move a surplus from one area of government to balance the books in another, that's hardly "stealing". It's called "management".

Also, if Harper said he was going to raise taxes and then did it, would that make him your hero, too? Hard to understand, isn't it


Pat_from_Mississauga
said

I wonder if Harper is taking his tax payer funded personal groomer with him - you know, the one who costs the taxpayers $300,000+ a year to powder Harper's nose so he looks nice for the camera. My tax dollars at work - being wasted by globe trotting, tax and spend Harper.


J the M Gold River
said

It's interesting to watch Steve's farewell tour. Giving what are really job interviews for some foreign corp via the media, padding his resume with other governments succeses. With any luck he will be successful soon, maybe with no need to return to Canada, I will give you a glowing reference if you need it Steve.


Greg in the Hammer
said

Headline should read "Harper continues to hide from Canadians to avoid blame for screwing up economy and taking no action for MONTHS"



HckStck
said

Out of Office Farwell Tour - Hon. Steven Harper Memoires, 2010




James
said

To Terri;
Have you reported this "thieft" to the police? It seems to me that is what you do when you see evidence of a crime. Otherwise there was no crime. There was no "pretense" about the surpluses that Martin brought in. Even Harper and the Conservatives complained that the surpluses were larger that was originally forcasted. To be fair, the surplus numbers were kept low in the first place for political reason. Nonetheless, they existed at the time but not anymore.
The vast majority of economists disgree with Harper on the benefits of cutting the GST. The reason? The cuts would not reach the consumers, they would be absorbed by businesses.


André in Ontario
said

Here we go, this joke Harper is going to tell the world that he knows what to do to deal with this world crisis. This guy has no ideas of his own & has made such a mess of this country luckily he never got a majority because he would have made a mess of our own banking system as he wanted to do. This guy didn't even recognize a recession when it hit scare between the eyes. Stop embarrassing us Harper because you're not all you think you are.


CYL
said

Way t'go Harper, but Canada is US coat tail. The news really know how to blow up lika a balloon, but like a balloon it deflates quickly. After this meeting, wonder what Harper's going to Jamaica for in a couple weeks.


Standin Prowd in ON
said

There will be a lot of people who will say Canada has no relevance on the international stage, others will go further with pesimistic, partisan venom. Valid or not we cannot sit in the corner quietly. Nobody will hear us that way. Let the foriegn media just report on Canadian sports as one comment suggested. That way they won't see us coming.


Terri
said

Have you forgotten James that is the Liberals that stole 45 billion from ei to pay down the debt while pretending they had a 12 billion dollar surplus. No wonder they had a surplus. Now we need that ei money. I know that I have more money in my pockets now than I did two years ago. Maybe 100.00 bucks a month more isn't much to you but it sure makes a difference to me. And I am still glad he cut the gst.He said he would do it and he did. Hard to understand isn't it?


DoasIsay
said

Greed, my what it has done to the economies of the world. Bundling and spinning worthless investments. Harper is in a position to help restore faith..that's what the economy is all about. Good luck.


James
said

Have you all forgotten that it was the Liberals, in particular Paul Martin, who closed the door on Canadian banks getting too big for their britches. Harper is simply riding on Martin's coattails.
On that note, it was Martin who help pay down Canada's debt and reduce Canada's Dept to GDP ratio from 70% to 50%. Again Harper shares the glory without any of the work.
If anything, Harper created a bigger financial problem by reducing the GST and wiping out surpluses that were used to pay down $36 billion on the debt.
Yeah, way to go Harper, your fine work will get you noticed in these meetings. NOT!!


Nick in Gatineau
said

I have to agree with Wayne on this one.

The best way to see where one stands internationally is to view and listen to foreign mediums.

For the most part, the word Canada shows up more often in the sports pages than in the economic/financial ones. In fact, EU newspapers have dedicated more space to the country of Togo than they have to Canada.

Otherwise, the only major stories were for Canary Wharf with the Reichman brothers and for Conrad Black - British Lord of a train station.

Canada's numBers are extraordinary because everyone has left us alone, and, because we have an abundance of natural resources. The most important aspect though is that we have never adopted any Communist mentality to our capitalism which many of the G20 have in the past. Mainland Europe has a very strong communist base which hinders truly transparent policies and regulations.

Lately, the EU has been adopting Sufism to many of its policies which has actually helped with their security measures but which are unstable for financial ones at this time - which will end up creating the most stable economic system on the planet once implemented.

Yes our banks are doing well. Yes they are better balanced than some. BUT. Can we go out and buy Barclay's ? Can we go out and buy Deutshbank ? No. Truth is we cannot compete against the big boys. Internationally, what matters is competition.


Don from Ottawa
said

Harper represents Canada well. He should now take the next step, and advocate that "toxic assets" be removed from the G20 lexicon and replaced with "bad decisions for which somebody's going to pay". The bailouts - and this dangerous flirtation with state ownership of private business - have got to stop before people get used to it.


Wayne (London, UK)
said

Ha - I'm sorry to be the one to tell you Phil, but this article is vastly playing up the role that Harper / Canada will have at this meeting (as you would expect from a Canadian News Source). Granted, our banking system could be a model for other countries, as not even the vaunted Swiss banks escaped this crisis - but that doesn't mean that anyone's actually going to listen to us.

As a Canadian living in the UK, I'm sorry to say that no one has even noticed that Canada will be at this summit; the focus is absolutely on Obama, the UK, China, and Brazil. Germany and the rest of the EU only matter insomuch as they're still in denial about the need to boost the economy. Canada's the shy kid in the corner that the US will put its arm around whenever it needs a helpful vote - nothing more.


Phil (Halifax)
said

Atta boy Stephen. Take your place where you rightly belong! I’m so proud to see a Canadian Prime Minister at the forefront of such an important world meeting. If the rest of the world applied standards that we have in Canada, maybe it wouldn't be in such a mess. Now if our own country would just wise up and give the Tory’s the majority they justly deserve, we would all be better off.


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