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Methinks some folks are beginning to enjoy the circus as much as I am N'esy Pas?

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U.S. bridge company advertisement asks Trump to reject Canadian-funded span

Ad claims Canadian bridge contract will cost the U.S. jobs and trade

Sanjay Maru· CBC News· Posted: Jun 20, 2018 7:00 PM ET



318 Comments 
Commenting is now closed for this story.


Art Rowe 
Art Rowe
I may be thick, BUT if Canada is funding this bridge, why cannot we buy the steel from whomever we wish? Why would 'buy American' apply to something being funded and purchased by Canadians?
Seems one failure in court isn't enough, now they have to go crying to the president.
However there is a good chance he will jump on this band wagon too.

Mark Gregory
Mark Gregory
@Art Rowe In this age of Trump why are you asking reasonable questions?
David Amos
David Amos
@Mark Gregory Methinks you and I may on the same wavelength this evening N'esy Pas?






Art Rowe 
Edward Ruberto
This is actually funny really. So this American Company loses in court and now there is a so-called President who is pushing this "Buy American" Policy and he thinks he can get his way. Reminds me of kids who ask one of their parents if they can have candy and one says no so they go to the other hoping they will say yes...lol.. Only in America...

David Amos
David Amos
@Edward Ruberto "This is actually funny really."

Methinks some folks are beginning to enjoy the circus as much as I am N'esy Pas?









Art Rowe 
Ross Gravelle
No doubt the family that owns the old bridge will win with President Trump, forget the court system that Canada won the court case with. Perhaps we should wait until the next President takes power, that is only 2.5 years away

Ed Betterley
Ed Betterley
@Ross Gravelle Don't be too sure of that.
David Amos
David Amos
@Ed Betterley I concur









Art Rowe 
Peter Williams
When you dig into this story there's a billionaire owner of the current Ambassador bridge who makes a ludicrous sum of money off of this crossing.

In fact, it's the only "privately owned border crossing" between the two countries. The man/family have a monopoly, and they aren't investing enough in the current crossing to keep up with traffic.

To be fair to them, this is the partial reality of having to buy out homes that basically surround the US side of the bridge and inhibit expansion - but whenever someone kicks and screams to keep their monopoly? Please. Compete, or be gobbled up, like any other business.

These guys are afraid to compete

George Halbert McKinney
George Halbert McKinney
@Gary Norton " the government sold it to him."

Can you document that a bit?

Wikipedia says:
The bridge is owned by Grosse Pointe billionaire Manuel Moroun through the Detroit International Bridge Company in the United States[4] and the Canadian Transit Company in Canada.[5] In 1979, when the previous owners of the bridge put it on the New York Stock Exchange and shares were traded, Moroun was able to buy shares, eventually acquiring the bridge.[6][7] The bridge carries 60 to 70 percent of commercial truck traffic in the region.[8][9] Moroun also owns the Ammex Detroit Duty Free Stores at both the bridge and the tunnel.[10]
David Amos
David Amos
@George Halbert McKinney Methinks you just did N'esy Pas?










Art Rowe 
Rudy Baker
Maybe we should use steel produced in America, use American workers to build the bridge, and then Canada can pay for it all.
Omg, this lunacy has to stop.

Chris Lambart
Chris Lambart
@Rudy Baker

The is exactly the scenario the US wants with the border wall. American materials, American workers, and Mexico pays.
David Amos
David Amos
@Chris Lambart Methinks everybody knows thats The Donald's biggest pipe dream which nobody believes particularly his back stabbing frenemies within the GOP N'esy Pas?











Art Rowe 
James Deschenes
The Moroun family have been spewing garbage for decades trying to stop any improvements that threaten their business at the detriment to everyone else.

David Amos
David Amos
@James Deschenes YUP










Jack Hill 
Jack Hill
With international trade predicted to decline, perhaps we don't need an American or Canadian bridge at all.

David Amos
David Amos
@Jack Hill YUP










Art Rowe 
Andrew Hebda (NS)
They just don't want the competition (and that after the sweetheart deal negotiated with the previous government.- check out the details)

Either you have a free market system, with at least the pretense of competition, or you don't.

David Amos
David Amos
@Andrew Hebda (NS) YUP









Art Rowe 
Jason Marshall
The greed of the family that owns the Ambassador bridge is really beyond the pale.

It is not like they were not given opportunities to be involved early on. However they focused on their monopoly and greed and this is the end result.

Sadly, in this pathetic le trump era, there may actually be people who listen.

David Amos
David Amos
@Jason Marshall YUP










Art Rowe 
Dave Singh
yep, the ad seems to be aimed at the simple minded, they stand a good chance.

David Amos
David Amos
@Dave Singh NOPE




U.S. bridge company advertisement asks Trump to reject Canadian-funded span

Ad claims Canadian bridge contract will cost the U.S. jobs and trade

Sanjay Maru· CBC News· Posted: Jun 20, 2018 7:00 PM ET


The ad targets former U.S. President Barack Obama for granting a Buy American waiver to Canada. (Black Diamond Strategies/Vimeo)




The U.S.-owned company behind a Windsor-Detroit bridge crossing is stepping up its fight to prevent a Canadian-funded second span from being built. And they're doing it by appealing to U.S. President Donald Trump with a TV commercial.

The owners of the Ambassador Bridge — the Detroit International Bridge Company (DIBC) — say the construction of the Canadian-funded Gordie Howe International Bridge will take jobs and trade from the U.S.
The Moroun family, who owns and operates the DIBC, previously appealed the Gordie Howe bridge in court, and failed. DIBC president Dan Stamper has also questioned why the "Buy American" policy doesn't apply to steel purchases for the Gordie Howe, which seems to have gone ignored considering that policy was waived for the Canadian infrastructure project.

Now, the DIBC is using patriotism to try and stop the project.

Patriotism play


Over a piano rendition of America the Beautiful, the commercial asks Trump to revoke the 2013 Obama-era "Buy America" waiver, which allows Canada to build a new international span to Detroit.
"There are two grand, new bridges being proposed between America and Canada. One is American-made, American-owned. It uses American-made steel — 5,000 American workers," the narrator says. "The other would be Canadian-made, Canadian-owned, Canadian workers. Who knows who would make the steel?"

Watch the U.S. DWIB's ad appealing to Trump here:




CBC News Windsor
Commercial asks Trump to kill Canadian bridge project
00:0001:00


Ad was paid for by the Detroit International Bridge Company. 1:00
The ad continues, showing a picture of former President Barack Obama frowning with the subtext "Obama sided with Canada." It concludes by asking Trump to review the permit, revoke it, and "let the grand new span be American."

'Multiple inaccuracies'


The Windsor-Detroit Bridge Authority (WDBA), which oversees the Canadian bridge project, takes great exception to the advertisement, saying the Gordie Howe Bridge is beneficial to both countries.
"There's a number of misrepresentations and inaccuracies in the video …. To suggest that only Canadians will be working on the project is a complete misrepresentation," said WDBA spokesperson Mark Butler.

"U.S. Border Services will be hiring Americans. CBSA will be hiring Canadians."

In March, the WDBA announced Parsons Inc. had been selected for the role of "owner's engineer"— a role which requires the company to act as a liaison between the bridge company and whatever firm is selected to actually build the Gordie Howe.
Butler said the WDBA have received three proposals from teams consisting of both Canadian and American companies.

"Unlike other projects which are just based in one country, this is a binational project," he said, adding workers from both countries are imperative for the bridge's construction.


An artist rendering of the Gordie Howe International Bridge. (WDBA)
The bridge will be built through a Buy America waiver, meaning any steel or iron component of the U.S. portion of the project can be sourced in either Canada or the United States.

"What [the waiver] is also saying is it won't be offshore steel — it won't be Chinese steel."
Butler said the WDBA will be announcing private sector partners for the Gordie Howe bridge construction in the coming weeks.

"We have all of the permits and approvals in place to begin construction of the bridge. We've already committed to $350 million of construction activities on both sides of the border already. And we are committed to starting the actual construction of the bridge in 2018."

Potential Trump response


Stamper said the plea was necessary because of Canada's "anti-competitive" demands to tear down the current bridge.

"We are appealing to the administration directly because the administration has the ability in the presidential permitting process to side with an American company," Stamper said in a statement to CBC News.
"The Ambassador Bridge's second span will create thousands of good paying American jobs using American steel."

West Windsor advocate, lawyer and school board trustee Fabio Costante is concerned Trump may act on the ad — in line with his administration's "America First" platform.


The ad's release comes as Trump and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau continue to spar over NAFTA renegotiations. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)
"It is a bit worrisome that things like this have legs. He tends to play to this type of frustration … it goes to show how untrustworthy the bridge company is to try to get their way," Costante said.
"There's a bit of fear-mongering that there's going to be no American jobs, even though that's been touted several times from the governor of Michigan and others."
He said the ad taps into a "very cynical side of politics" and finds it unfortunate that Moroun's company is resorting to these measures to derail the Gordie Howe project.

"To go reach out directly to the president and play it from the lens of American-made steel and American-made jobs is misleading."

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