Shamrock Summit: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Canada–United States relations]] | [[Category:Canada–United States relations]] | ||
[[Category:History of Quebec City]] | [[Category:History of Quebec City]] | ||
[[Category:Diplomatic conferences in Canada]] | [[Category:Diplomatic conferences in Canada]] | ||
[[Category:20th-century diplomatic conferences]] | [[Category:20th-century diplomatic conferences]] | ||
[[Category:1985 conferences]] | [[Category:1985 conferences]] | ||
[[Category:1985 in international relations]] | [[Category:1985 in international relations]] | ||
[[Category:Brian Mulroney]] | [[Category:Presidency of Ronald Reagan]] | ||
[[Category:Premiership of Brian Mulroney]] | |||
[[Category:United States presidential visits]] | [[Category:United States presidential visits]] | ||
[[Category:1985 in Quebec]] | [[Category:1985 in Quebec]] | ||
[[Category:1980s in Quebec City]] | [[Category:1980s in Quebec City]] | ||
[[Category:March 1985 in Canada]] | [[Category:March 1985 in Canada]] | ||
Latest revision as of 06:09, 27 June 2025
The Shamrock Summit was the colloquial name given to the March 17–18, 1985 meeting between Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and US President Ronald Reagan in Quebec City. It gained this nickname because of the Irish background of the two leaders and because the meeting started on St. Patrick's Day. The summit was capped by a televised gala, which ended with Mulroney, Reagan and their wives singing "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling" at the Grand Théâtre de Québec, which publicly exemplified the camaraderie between the two leaders.[1][2][3]
American officials saw the summit as a chance to mend relations between the two countries in the post-Pierre Trudeau era.[4]
Among the many issues discussed in a busy 24-hour schedule were military planning, upgrading the DEW line to use modern electronics, a landmark agreement on the control of acid rain, and the formal signing of the Pacific Salmon Treaty[5] and the "Canada-US Declaration on Goods and Services", the first major step towards the 1988 Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement.
Background
Mulroney enjoyed a close friendship with Reagan, as both considered themselves conservatives politically and shared a common agenda, notably on free trade. This relationship bred some resentment among those who felt it was improper for Canadian-US relations to be too intimate. Canadian historian Jack Granatstein said that this "public display of sucking up to Reagan may have been the single most demeaning moment in the entire political history of Canada's relations with the United States."[6]
References
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- ↑ "Shamrock Summit seen as 'turning point' for U.S.-Canada relations", CBC News, 18 August 1999
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- Pages with broken file links
- Canada–United States relations
- History of Quebec City
- Diplomatic conferences in Canada
- 20th-century diplomatic conferences
- 1985 conferences
- 1985 in international relations
- Presidency of Ronald Reagan
- Premiership of Brian Mulroney
- United States presidential visits
- 1985 in Quebec
- 1980s in Quebec City
- March 1985 in Canada
- Pages with script errors