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Canadian ambassador-designate to the United States Gary Doer speaks to reporters in Ottawa on Thursday, October 22, 2009.FRED CHARTRAND

Canada's newest ambassador to the United States met Wednesday with President Barack Obama to present his diplomatic credentials, but it wasn't all handshakes, good wishes and a handful of White House M&Ms - the thorny issue of Buy American was also on the agenda.

Gary Doer, accompanied by his wife and daughters, said the controversial U.S. trade policy was at the centre of a brief discussion with the president, despite Mr. Obama's apparent weariness of the subject.

"[The President]seems to have heard the issue of Buy American from our Prime Minister over and over and over again," the former Manitoba premier said after his meeting, nibbling on the chocolate candy that's become the snack of choice both at the White House and in the Oval Office.

"But within the protocol it was useful to again mention it ... my duty is to make sure we repeat it over and over and over again until we get a reasonable agreement with the United States on it."

Mr. Obama has played down the effects of Buy American on Canadian exporters and manufacturers, referring to it on several occasions - including during Mr. Harper's visit to the Oval Office in September - as a minor kerfuffle in the Canada-U.S. trade relationship.

On Wednesday, Mr. Doer said, the President was more keen to discuss family rather than politics.

"I think he was more interested in my daughters, as President and a father of two other daughters," Mr. Doer said.

The Doer girls - Emily, 19, and 14-year-old Kate - encouraged Mr. Obama to take his daughters to see polar bears in northern Manitoba during his next visit to Canada.

Talks are ongoing between Canada and U.S. trade representatives on the Buy American provisions, which were inserted by Congress into Mr. Obama's $787 billion economic stimulus package and which require only U.S.-made goods be used in stateside infrastructure projects.

But by all accounts, the negotiations are moving slowly and with some difficulty, with the U.S. hesitant to grant Canada an exemption from Buy American. Ottawa has offered to allow American firms to bid on provincial and municipal projects in Canada in exchange for an exemption.

"It's a marathon right now in terms of the status of those negotiations," Mr. Doer said. "There's discussions, but it's obviously not resolved ... the bottom line is there's no resolution."

His job as ambassador, Mr. Doer added, is to continue to remind U.S. political leaders that jobs not just in Canada, but also south of the border, are reliant on free and open trade with their northern neighbours.

Three weeks after his arrival in Washington, Mr. Doer is now officially Canada's envoy to the United States after Wednesday's White House ceremony. Mr. Doer, his wife Ginny Devine, and their children were joined by 13 other new ambassadors and their families at the morning event.

In the weeks to come, Mr. Doer said, he hopes to travel to states that rely heavily on Canada-U.S. trade in order to educate Americans about the dangers of protectionism.

Mr. Doer said congressional support for Buy American is "not very good domestic politics" and is based mainly on a patriotic slogan.

"What may sound good is not very good in the long run for jobs here and jobs in Canada. That's the case we have got to make. It's not just the appeal of the slogan. It's the jobs in communities that we have to tie together with our argument."

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