Lethbridge Herald

Canada holds out hope for NAFTA discussion­s

CANADA SEEKS INTENSIVE NAFTA TALKS, EVEN IF TRUMP’S IN NO RUSH TO SIGN

- Andy Blatchford

The federal Liberal government is determined to rekindle intensive talks on a new continenta­l trade pact this summer — even though President Donald Trump says he won’t sign a renegotiat­ed NAFTA until after the U.S. midterm elections this fall.

Now that Mexico’s presidenti­al election is done, Ottawa wants negotiatio­ns on the North America Free Trade Agreement to restart as soon as possible, one government official familiar with the plan said on condition of anonymity.

“Our priority has always been to conclude a mutually beneficial agreement as quickly as possible and that, I think, remains our goal,” said the official, who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

“That’s what we’re going to stay focused on. We’ll see where it goes.”

That effort is expected to intensify following Monday’s election win by Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who has already said he supports the continued renegotiat­ion of NAFTA and wants his own team of experts to be part of the talks before he takes office Dec. 1.

Until Lopez Obrador is sworn in, members of the current Mexican administra­tion will continue to serve as the country’s lead NAFTA negotiator­s, the official said.

Trump, however, has said he wants to wait until after November’s U.S. congressio­nal midterms before committing to a new agreement.

In an interview that aired Sunday on Fox News, Trump said he could quickly sign a revised NAFTA with Canada and Mexico, but instead wants to land a better deal for the U.S. Asked about the timing of an agreement, Trump said: “I want to wait until after the election.”

Trump has also indicated repeatedly he’d be open to striking separate agreements with Canada and Mexico.

A fresh round of talks on the three-country pact will come with Canada and the U.S. locked in an unpreceden­ted, cross-border trade fight. The neighbours have already swapped punitive tariffs on some imports — and there are fears things could get worse.

On Sunday, Ottawa responded to the Trump administra­tion’s tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum with duties of its own against U.S. imports — dollar-for-dollar, reciprocal tariffs that target steel and aluminum, as well as a long list of consumer goods, the government says.

Trump himself has already threatened to go even further by putting tariffs on the auto sector, which could prove far more damaging for the Canadian economy than the steel and aluminum duties.

That tariff fight will form a rather tense backdrop for the effort to reach a NAFTA deal, which Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland has said she expects to ramp up soon, following several conversati­ons last week with U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer.

On Monday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke with Lopez Obrador by phone. The two discussed “mutually beneficial economic and trading relationsh­ip between the two countries, and their shared priority of updating the North American Free Trade Agreement for the betterment of their peoples,” Trudeau’s office said in a statement.

Canada’s retaliator­y tariffs on U.S. goods do nothing to help Canada and will only hurt American workers, White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders said Monday.

“We’ve been very nice to Canada for many years and they’ve taken advantage of that, particular­ly advantage of our farmers,” she said.

In recent months, Trump has frequently attacked Canadian trade barriers on agricultur­e — dairy products in particular — as unfairly hurting American farmers.

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