Freeland’s Washington pitch shows the foreign affairs file remains on her mind

It’s the strategy for which many people have been calling for years, says former diplomat Ben Rowswell about the 'Freeland Doctrine.'
In a speech at the Brookings Institution earlier this month, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland trumpeted a new vision of the world with greater engagement between allies.
Nearly three years after she left the Pearson Building as Canada’s top diplomat, Chrystia Freeland travelled to Washington, D.C., to offer a new vision of the world, which came as a surprise to some back in Ottawa. Dubbed the “Freeland Doctrine,” Canada’s deputy prime minister and finance m...

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