Ahead of Biden-Trudeau Meeting, Congressman Higgins Urges the Leaders to Rebuild & Reimagine the U.S. – Canada Relationship

In advance of a bilateral meeting between U.S. President Joe Biden and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau scheduled for Tuesday, January 10, Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26) is urging the leaders to refocus on strengthening the bond between the border countries.

Higgins said, “In recent decades events ranging from the terrorist attacks on September 11th to the health complications of the COVID pandemic have forced both physical and opportunity barriers between the United States and Canada. As we’ve moved on, we’ve seen a layering rather than a loosening of policies that constrict rather than grow a meaningful melding of our people and economies. It is advantageous for both countries to take a fresh look at where things stand and reimagine how to, once again, make a good relationship great.”

Congressman Higgins’ Western New York district, which includes the cities of Buffalo and Niagara Falls, borders Southern Ontario. Higgins has been critical of disjointed border policies during the pandemic, fought to reopen the border to recreational travel, leads efforts to improve trade and tourism, pushed for adequate staffing levels at border crossings, opposed the 1% tax imposed on non-Canadian property owners, continues to advocate for the streamlining of cross-border passenger rail, and is urging efforts to reduce the NEXUS backlog. 

Rep. Higgins serves as co-chair of the binational Canada-United States Interparliamentary Group and the bipartisan Congressional Northern Border Caucus.

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Cohen delivered his lesson to attorney Todd Blanche, the lead defender in Trump's criminal hush money case, as the two discussed conversations that Trump's former fixer had recorded.

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New York allows "one-party consent," which allows anyone participating in a conversation to legally record it without informing other parties.

This check did not stop Blanche from pushing Cohen on recorded conversations he shared with reporters such as New York Times Maggie Haberman and with clients who Blanche argued were unilaterally protected by privilege.

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Blanche sputtered a question asking incredulously if Cohen was claiming to have relied on this exception. Again, Cohen was calm.

"You asked if there were exceptions," a deadpan Cohen replied. "And I said 'Yes, the crime-fraud exception."

This exchange occurred on the second day of Cohen's courtroom battle with Blanche in the Manhattan criminal courtroom where Trump stands accused of falsifying business records to conceal hush money paid to adult film star Stormy Daniels.

Trump pleaded not guilty, denies an affair with Daniels and contends he is the victim of a political witch hunt, without evidence.

Blanche had a rocky start Thursday morning that saw his request to consult Judge Juan Merchan swiftly shut down with a resounding "No."

His jab at members of Congress fell flat, and in front of several Republican House members who came to the New York City courtroom to back up Trump.

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The morning's session also saw Merchan sternly order Blanche to fix a problem raised by prosecutor Josh Steinglass that Blanche had unfairly suggested Cohen was engaged in improper conduct tied to the District Attorney's criminal indictment.

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