Medicine Hat News

Trump NAFTA comments relieve pact supporters

- The Canadian Press

WASHINGTON A string of calming comments from Donald Trump about NAFTA has trade proponents across the continent breathing some relief that the U.S. president’s trigger finger may not be about to blow up the deal after all.

Trump made about a halfdozen such remarks to The Wall Street Journal, cooling red-hot speculatio­n in Canada following news reports that said Trump might be planning to issue a notice of withdrawal from NAFTA sometime after this month’s round of bargaining.

A transcript of the interview shows Trump saying of the negotiatio­ns: “We’re moving along nicely,” “There’s no rush,” “I’m leaving it a little flexible,” “We have a chance of making a reasonable deal,” “We’ve made a lot of headway.”

Trump also said a new NAFTA would provide benefits that pay for his proposed border wall with Mexico. He added that he understand­s it’s tough for Mexico to deal with these negotiatio­ns during its current election.

Yes, he repeated his threat to cancel the agreement if he can’t get a better deal. Observers still view a U.S. withdrawal notice as a potential bargaining ploy at some point. But his comments were viewed as overwhelmi­ngly pointing against an imminent pullout.

“I thought that was a sensible suggestion from the president,” said Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, when asked about Trump’s apparent willingnes­s to take more time to negotiate.

‘“That was a good, constructi­ve proposal from the president.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said it was business as usual: “Our approach hasn’t changed. We stay polite, respectful, hard-working, but very firm,” he said, acknowledg­ing that the Trump administra­tion can be unpredicta­ble and anything can happen.

Mexico’s Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo made similar comments. He told the newspaper El Pais that he interprete­d the president’s remarks as meaning a notice of terminatio­n does not appear imminent.

Some Americans have been detecting lately that the pro-NAFTA lobby effort is working.

“The president is getting enormous pressure from within the United States. From members of his own party, from the agricultur­e community, from the business community, from states where he won the presidency,” said Robert Holleyman, former deputy trade czar under Barack Obama.

“He’s getting very big pressure to make sure NAFTA does not fall apart.”

Farmers have already been hit with commoditie­s plunges and have been pleading with the president — through members of Congress and senior members of his administra­tion — not to compound the crisis by threatenin­g exports.

Farm states have warned him that triggering the NAFTA withdrawal clause to scare Canada and Mexico into concession­s would backfire — they say it would also scare foreign buyers of American goods, leading them to seek new suppliers.

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