From 1867 to 1911, the Liberals generally favoured reciprocity. After they won the 1896 election, however, their leader, Canadian Prime Minister
Wilfrid Laurier, did not pursue free trade because the United States refused to discuss the issue. Instead, he implemented a Liberal version of the National Policy by maintaining high tariffs on goods from other countries that restricted Canadian goods. However, he lowered tariffs to the same level as countries that admitted Canadian goods. Political rhetoric made it a party issue. The Conservatives, which stood publicly for nationalism and protectionism (the National Policy), succeeded in associating the Liberals with free trade, commercial union, with the United States, and
continentalism that would lead to annexation by the United States. In 1911, Laurier's Liberals successfully negotiated a reciprocity treaty, again called the
Canadian–American Reciprocity Treaty, with US President
William Howard Taft. In a speech before the US House of Representatives, Speaker
Champ Clark spoke warmly of the treaty, saying it was a step towards the United States annexing Canada. The Conservatives made reciprocity the central issue of the 1911 election and ignited anti-American sentiment by dire warnings the treaty would turn the economy over to American control. The Liberals were decisively defeated in the
1911 election, and the treaty was rejected by the new Conservative government, led by
Robert Borden. After 1945, both nations joined the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), and tariffs began to steadily decline. Free trade between the two nations was finalized by the 1988
Canada–United States Free Trade Agreement. ==See also==