Tories seek legal standing in U.S. mad-cow case
CTV.ca News Staff
The Conservatives said they'll try to persuade an American judge to let them take part this summer in a Montana court case -- one that could decide whether the U.S. border will ever open again to live Canadian cattle.
Tory trade critic Belinda Stronach made the announcement this morning, accusing the Liberal government of not doing enough for Canadian beef producers hit hard by the mad cow crisis.
Stronach said her party will ask a U.S. federal judge for intervenor status in a July court hearing in Montana.
The U.S. government closed its border to live cattle imports from Canada in 2003 after a single Canadian cow tested positive for BSE, or mad cow disease.
The border was to reopen to live cattle on March 7 of this year, but that was delayed by a challenge from R-CALF -- a U.S. cattle industry lobby group.
A Montana judge sided with the cattleman's group and issued an injunction preventing the opening of the border.
The July hearing will decide whether that temporary injunction should be made permanent or expanded to include other beef products from Canada.
Stronach said the Liberal government "chose the wrong legal option" when it sought amicus status at the July hearing.
Amicus status allows little more than the privilege of submitting a written brief at a hearing; whereas intervenor status involves actual participation, she said.
"Someone has to defend the interests of hard-working, suffering Canadian farmers and ranchers" in the Montana court, Stronach added.
"If (Prime Minister) Paul Martin won't get the job done because he is too distracted by his own political misfortune to govern, we will step up to the plate."
Earlier in the week, the prime minister warned that U.S meat packers will pay a long-term price for policies which led to the closure of the border to Canadian beef.
He said the closed border is only strengthening Canadian meat packers who will only become stronger and less dependent on U.S. plants.
"The net result of that is we will have the capacity once the border opens up to export substantially into the United States,'' Martin told an audience of foreign-policy experts in Ottawa on Monday.
"U.S. processors are (going) to suddenly realize that in fact what has happened has not been in their interest."
It's estimated that the mad cow crisis has cost the Canadian cattle industry up to $7 billion.
With a report from The Canadian Press
CTV.ca News Staff
The Conservatives said they'll try to persuade an American judge to let them take part this summer in a Montana court case -- one that could decide whether the U.S. border will ever open again to live Canadian cattle.
Tory trade critic Belinda Stronach made the announcement this morning, accusing the Liberal government of not doing enough for Canadian beef producers hit hard by the mad cow crisis.
Stronach said her party will ask a U.S. federal judge for intervenor status in a July court hearing in Montana.
The U.S. government closed its border to live cattle imports from Canada in 2003 after a single Canadian cow tested positive for BSE, or mad cow disease.
The border was to reopen to live cattle on March 7 of this year, but that was delayed by a challenge from R-CALF -- a U.S. cattle industry lobby group.
A Montana judge sided with the cattleman's group and issued an injunction preventing the opening of the border.
The July hearing will decide whether that temporary injunction should be made permanent or expanded to include other beef products from Canada.
Stronach said the Liberal government "chose the wrong legal option" when it sought amicus status at the July hearing.
Amicus status allows little more than the privilege of submitting a written brief at a hearing; whereas intervenor status involves actual participation, she said.
"Someone has to defend the interests of hard-working, suffering Canadian farmers and ranchers" in the Montana court, Stronach added.
"If (Prime Minister) Paul Martin won't get the job done because he is too distracted by his own political misfortune to govern, we will step up to the plate."
Earlier in the week, the prime minister warned that U.S meat packers will pay a long-term price for policies which led to the closure of the border to Canadian beef.
He said the closed border is only strengthening Canadian meat packers who will only become stronger and less dependent on U.S. plants.
"The net result of that is we will have the capacity once the border opens up to export substantially into the United States,'' Martin told an audience of foreign-policy experts in Ottawa on Monday.
"U.S. processors are (going) to suddenly realize that in fact what has happened has not been in their interest."
It's estimated that the mad cow crisis has cost the Canadian cattle industry up to $7 billion.
With a report from The Canadian Press
Comment