Posts Tagged ‘U.S. Embassy Ottawa’

June 14, 2012: Economic Statecraft Day

Thursday, June 14th, 2012

Today is Global Economic Statecraft Day. When I heard that the U.S. State Department would be celebrating this day, my first thought was “every day in Canada is Economic Statecraft Day.” Our job is to help keep the wheels of the largest trading relationship in the world rolling and Economic Statecraft is how we do that. Our team at the Embassy in Ottawa and our seven consulates throughout Canada work tirelessly to ensure that the $1.8 billion in trade that crosses our shared border every day continues to flow in both directions and that the U.S.-Canadian economic relationship thrives.

I am in Vancouver today, meeting with business leaders to learn more about the business climate in British Columbia, opportunities to enhance bilateral cooperation on trade issues, and views on regulatory and border issues including the Regulatory Cooperation Council and Beyond the Border initiatives.

So what is Economic Statecraft, not just today, but every day? Economic Statecraft is Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s vision to put economics at the forefront of U.S. foreign policy. It means using smart economic foreign policy to promote the North American marketplace. It is a realization that security and prosperity are shaped in boardrooms and trading floors as well as in capital buildings and international summits. In Canada, Economic Statecraft means ensuring that our tremendous economic interdependence strengthens our relationships with each other and in the world.

In The Lexus and the Olive Tree, award-winning journalist Thomas Friedman wrote that no two countries with a McDonald’s restaurant have ever gone to war. This reflects an important point that economic interdependence breeds peace and stability. This, at its core, is Economic Statecraft and there is no better example of successful economic statecraft than in the U.S.-Canada relationship. Our trillion dollar trade and investment relationship creates close political and social connections and these political and social connections lead to even more trade. This “virtuous cycle” of friendships creating trade and trade creating friendships is exactly what Economic Statecraft is all about.

DJ

December 21, 2011: Season’s Greetings

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

As Julie and I approach our third holiday season in Ottawa (and our third Christmas tree as our loyal readers will remember) we want to take a moment to send season’s greetings to our Embassy family and to our friends across Canada, the United States, and around the world.

This is the time when all of us reflect on the events of the past year. It has been a great year for the relationship between our two countries. We are honored to have had a role in that effort. It has also been a great year for our family. We love it here. We continue to travel throughout Canada. We continue to make so many great friends.

On behalf of President Obama and the American people, we want to wish all of you a merry Christmas, happy Hanukkah, and a happy, healthy, and peaceful new year.

David and Julie

Happy Holidays

July 4, 2011: Ottawa

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

This afternoon we had a backyard BBQ for 4000 friends. Luckily, we have a very big backyard. 

4th of July at the Ambassador's Residence

The party was great fun and there were so many highlights. But I have to start with the surprise appearance of Laureen Harper. Her presence says a lot about the extraordinary relationship between the United States and Canada, and between the President and the Prime Minister. It also says a lot about her love for BBQ. 

Julie Jacobson, Ambassador David Jacobson, and Laureen Harper

We also had a BBQ cook-off among three teams from the United States and three from Canada.  For three days, 25 of the best BBQ chefs in North America were camped out on my lawn. For three days I felt compelled to test their recipes. (I was joking that I needed to make a stop to see my cardiologist when this was all over. In fact, it turned out our friend Dr. Robert Roberts, the head of the Ottawa Heart Institute, was among the 4000.)  

I suppose everyone – including me – thought the U.S. was going to sweep the contest. It was my chance to get even for the Gold Medal Hockey Game. So I bet Mrs. Harper a couple of cases of beer. Alas, I took it on the chin again. The Canadians won Best Chicken, Best Ribs, Best Pork Butt (I don’t make up these names); and Best National Team. The Americans took the loss hard.  But I sense a new national rivalry developing!

A BBQ Chef prepares ribs for the 4th of July event

There were so many great friends who attended. Everyone had a great time. Most notably Julie and me. 

There are a bunch of people I want to thank for their efforts, starting with the Canadian people.  They have been our friends. They have welcomed us into their country and into their homes.  They have treated us like family. I can say without reservation that the United States and Canada are the greatest of friends and allies.  

Julie Jacobson, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson, and Ambassador David Jacobson

The celebration wouldn’t have been possible without the volunteers from our Embassy and their families as well as the staff at our residence. They are the ones who deserve the credit, not Julie and me.

I want to thank John Woods, our BBQ guru, who assembled the teams and organized the competition in a flawless way. And I want to thank all of our sponsors. Our national day is NOT paid for by the United States government. It is totally supported by our sponsors. Without their generosity the event literally would not have happened.  

Juno award winner Sean Jones sings the Star Spangled Banner

On the music front, I want to thank our headliner, Ottawa’s own Lynn Miles; Sean Jones, who did a spectacular version of O Canada and the Star Spangled Banner; and the Governor General’s Band of the Ceremonial Guard, who performed good old fashioned 4th of July marching music for our guests.

The Governor General's Band of the Ceremonial Guard

During the party I had a chance to give a few reflections on the significance of the 4th of July which I would like to repeat here:

On July 4, 1776, in the yard of Independence Hall in Philadelphia, a man named John Nixon read a document which changed the course of history. That Declaration of Independence famously began: 

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed….” 

We are here today, 235 years later, to celebrate what George Washington referred to as “the experiment entrusted in the hands of the American people.” That experiment has served the American people well–in times of peace and in times of war; in times of plenty and in times of want. 

It has been the answer to the cynical, to the fearful, and to the doubtful. There have been times — like the present — when the road is long. The climb is steep. But we’ve always — always — made it to the top of the hill. 

One of the things I’ve learned since I got to Canada is that our two countries share so many of the values that are enshrined in the Declaration of Independence. Therefore, if all of us – Americans and Canadians – work together, we can change our countries … we can change the world for the better. We can continue Washington’s great experiment toward a more perfect union. 

American flag at the residence of the U.S. Ambassador

So I ask each of you to come together in a spirit of responsibility and mutual respect, to pitch in and work harder. Not only for ourselves, but for each other.  In the words of my boss Barack Obama: “This is our chance to answer that call. This is our moment. This is our time.”

DJ

Ottawa: Doors Open 2011

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

Last year, for the first time, we opened up the U.S. Embassy to visitors for a day as part of Doors Open Ottawa. While about 500 people were able to participate, we had hundreds more (actually thousands) we couldn’t accommodate.

The U.S. Embassy Ottawa


I said it last year and today I’m still so moved by all the interest in visiting the U.S. Embassy. I feel it is important for us to open our doors. We want to be good neighbors. Taking down the cement barriers on Sussex was a part of that effort. Welcoming our friends is another. Participating in Doors Open also helps us to meet the standard my boss, President Obama, has set for us being as open and transparent as possible.

The U.S. Embassy Ottawa


So this year we are going to be open for tours on both days during the Doors Open weekend, June 4 and 5, 2011.

The U.S. Embassy Ottawa


If you want to visit us during Doors Open click on http://canada.usembassy.gov and follow the Doors Open link to sign up. It’s really important that each member of your of your group fills out the entrance form.

The U.S. Embassy Ottawa


I would be remiss if I didn’t send a shout out to the hundreds of other buildings you could also visit in town as a part of this amazing program. Check out Doors Open Ottawa for more information.

I can’t wait to meet those of you who have signed up for tours. It’s good to be open!

DJ

September 29, 2010 — Sussex jersey barriers coming down

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

I just wanted to follow up on a promise we made in the Spring of this year to the people of Ottawa. 

You’ll recall around the time the Embassy participated in its first City of Ottawa Doors Open event we also announced, together with our partners in the Federal Government, the NCC, and City of Ottawa, that the jersey barriers located on Sussex would be removed. 

Well, this week the barriers are finally coming down – part of the on-going renewal process on Sussex Ave. I couldn’t be happier about it. Like many Ottawans, I too had to look at them every day.  And, while we’ll have to endure construction on Sussex for a bit longer to finish the work on the sewers and other utilities, this particular part of the project makes me very pleased. 

Here’s an artist’s rendering of what the street will look like after the work is complete.  Quite an improvement! 

It is a priority for me and for the Obama administration to be open. It’s why we participated in Doors Open earlier this year, and why we continue to look for opportunities to share the work we do with our community.

We want to be good neighbors. Taking down barriers is a part of that effort.

 DJ

July 4, 2010 – United States Independence Day

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

To tell you the truth, I tried mightily last summer to advance my Senate confirmation so I could be here in Ottawa by July 4. I had been told our party on the lawn of the Ambassador’s Residence is the largest 4th of July party in the world outside of the United States. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. But today definitely made up for it!

Four thousand friends joined Julie, our children Wynne and Jeremy, and me for the celebration of the 234th anniversary of the independence of the United States of America. It was kind of special to be able to say to those assembled: “On behalf of President Barack Obama, I want to wish each of you a happy 4th of July!”

Ambassador Jacobson and family at the 4th of July

Ambassador Jacobson delivers remarks with family at the 4th of July

The party was a celebration of the home state of President Obama and his family and me and my family – Illinois. Since we couldn’t be in Chicago, we brought Chicago to Ottawa. Among the invitees were all the foods you would get at an Illinois 4th of July party: deep dish pizza, Italian beef, Polish sausage, Eli’s cheese cake, beer, etc……

Cupcakes

Cupcakes in the shape of an American flag

The Governor General’s Band of the Ceremonial Guard played American patriotic songs – their repertoire is multi–national — as guests arrived and Julie and I shook MANY hands. O Canada and the Star Spangled Banner were sung by John McDermott, whose rendition has, with good cause, become a tradition at our celebration. And my friends from Chicago, blues greats, Lynne Jordan and the Shivers, thrilled the crowd with their set. At one point several of the guests were dancing up on the stage with them!

The Marine Corps Guard at the singing of the national anthem

The Marine Corps Color Guard present the colors during the national anthem

The 4th of July is an opportunity for Americans to give thanks to those whose foresight and determination shaped the course of our nation’s history. An opportunity to give thanks to those who defined freedom as a virtue and equality as a goal.

But those values have not come without enormous cost. And so it is also a day to give thanks to the men and women in our armed forces around the world whose service and sacrifice has protected those values that were enshrined in the Declaration of Independence 234 years ago.

It was also a chance for Julie and me to express our gratitude to the Canadian people for the grace, the kindness, and the hospitality they have shown us since we arrived as guests in your country nine months ago. From the first day, when we presented our credentials to the Governor General, through our travels across your vast and beautiful country, to those glorious Olympic Games. (Though I will say you weren’t quite as gracious as I might have liked during that hockey overtime.)

For your warmth and your friendship Julie and I will be eternally grateful.
DJ

June 6, 2010 – Ottawa

Monday, June 7th, 2010

I’ve got something great to write about today – yesterday’s Doors Open Ottawa event at the U.S. Embassy. As I have said before we decided to participate for the first time since the Embassy opened 10 years ago because we represent a President and an Administration that believes that openness and transparency are keys to good government.

An ingraving from the Embassy building's opening

An engraving from the Embassy building's opening

While opening our doors for a day, quite obviously, is not the beginning and end of transparency, I do believe it was an important step in the right direction. I also think the architecture of the Embassy building – particularly the interiors – reinforces that desire for openness and transparency.

Sails that hang in the hallway

Sails that hang in the hallway

Yesterday we had about 600 of our Ottawa neighbors come through our open doors. I was there for the first couple of hours and conducted the tours of my personal office. I showed our guests some pictures from the Obama Campaign, the photo of my 7th grade class trip to Washington (the first of many trips to that city), my collection of “challenge coins”, Presidential Commissions, family pictures and some other personal effects.

The Embassy's view of Parliament Hill

The Embassy's view of Parliament Hill

I asked every tour group the same question: now that they were inside, was the Embassy what they expected? Almost to a person they said the same thing. It was so much prettier and cheerier than they thought it would be. I explained that’s why we opened the doors. This is a place where good people (about half Canadian and half American) work hard every day to maintain and enhance the closest relationship between two countries in the world. I asked them to tell their friends what they saw and what they thought.

The atrium opening with a view of the marble floor

The atrium opening to a view of the Terrazzo floors

While our visitors seemed to be enjoying themselves, I think the Embassy staff – including me – enjoyed it even more. It was rewarding to see the excitement on our guests’ faces.

I am really glad we took part in this effort. I look forward to next year!

DJ

March 9, 2010 – “Common Ground”

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

The other day we had a reception at our home to open the art exhibit Julie has assembled as part of the State Department’s Art in the Embassies Program. She has called it “Common Ground” and I think that really captures what we were trying to achieve.

"Autumn" by Emily Carr

"Autumn" by Emily Carr

The night was a win-win for us. My wife got to talk about a wonderful art collection. And I got to talk about a wonderful wife.

When given the opportunity to assemble this collection Julie decided to stray a little from State Department tradition. Rather than showcasing living American artists, she wanted to reinforce President Barack Obama’s message that the relationships between nations should be based on mutual interest and mutual respect. We were both particularly moved by his message in Cairo, when he said:

“All of us share this world for but a brief moment in time. The question is whether we spend that time focused on what pushes us apart, or whether we commit ourselves to an effort – a sustained effort – to find common ground, to focus on the future we seek for our children, and to respect the dignity of all human beings.”

In this search for “common ground” Julie collected a group of landscape paintings by American and Canadian artists that showcase the natural beauty of North America.

"Straw Stacks, March Thaw" by Illingworth Holey Kerr

"Straw Stacks, March Thaw" by Illingworth Holey Kerr

Most of the Canadian paintings are from the Group of Seven or from subsequent painters who were inspired stylistically or thematically by the group’s depiction of their native landscape. The American paintings came from the Taos School or their progeny. Among the founding members of the Taos School were Blumenschein, Sharp, and Dunton, who are represented in this collection. Like the Group of Seven, the Taos School strove to depict the unique and majestic landscapes in which they lived.

"Untitled" (Mountain Landscape) by Marion Nicoll

"Untitled" (Mountain Landscape) by Marion Nicoll

We are particularly pleased to present two paintings by American artists whose subject matter is in Canada: Georgia O’Keeffe’s “Green Mountains, Canada” which was painted in the Gaspé Peninsula and William Herbert “Buck” Dunton’s “Pass to Canada,” which is a view of the Canadian Rockies.

The art has been loaned to us by the Art Institute of Chicago, Calgary’s Collection of Glenbow Museum, the Ottawa Art Gallery’s Firestone Collection of Canadian Art, University of Oklahoma’s Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, the Panhandle Plains Historical Museum in Texas, Addison Ripley Fine Art in Washington, D.C., and Saskatchewan Telecommunications. We want to thank all of them for their support. We would also like to thank our friend Paul Gray for early inspiration, and curator Camille Benton and registrar Jonathan Arbolino of the State Department for their help and support for the unusual nature of this project.

Julie and I are proud to share common ground with our neighbors, our friends, and our allies in Canada. And I am proud of Julie.

DJ