National Post (National Edition)

Negotiator­s report progress in latest round of NAFTA talks

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

MEXICO CITY • The latest round of NAFTA negotiatio­ns wrapped up Tuesday with the three countries declaring they have made progress, and committing to work through the harder negotiatin­g issues in time to get a deal by the end of the year.

The three lead ministers say they’re pleased with what’s been accomplish­ed as the talks move to Ottawa for the next round, scheduled to run from Sept. 23-27.

While sources say there has been no serious movement yet on any of the more sensitive issues, the countries say they have tabled two dozen texts that will form the backbone of the chapters in a modernized North American Free Trade Agreement.

During Friday’s closing news conference, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland repeatedly stressed that it’s normal for the major sticking points to remain unresolved at this point.

The countries have started working through the easier issues, and have tabled texts, and have had a chance to learn each other’s priorities, Freeland said.

“I want to reiterate: This is Day 20,” she noted. “This is an extremely accelerate­d process. This is Day 20 of an accelerate­d and extremely comprehens­ive negotiatio­n ... We are running fast for (an agreement by) the end of the year.

U.S. trade czar Robert Lighthizer extended his thanks to both North American neighbours for their best wishes in the wake of a devastatin­g hurricane in Texas and Louisiana.

Lighthizer said two dozen chapter texts have been tabled, and though he reiterated some of his tough talk from the opening round, where he lamented the devastatio­n caused by NAFTA, he struck a less aggressive tone.

“Our work continues at a record pace,” he said.

“These (new) chapters represent a new modern agreement which, once concluded, will support robust economic growth in North America for decades to come.”

The agreements reached so far relate to less-controvers­ial parts of the agreement.

Multiple sources say the countries have not even begun dealing with the more complex elements — and that any attempts by one party to raise a contentiou­s issue have been brushed off by the other parties.

That’s true of Canadian proposals like some labour reforms, which have been declared a non-starter by the U.S. It’s also true of the U.S. desire to secure more dairy sales in Canada. The U.S. tried informally starting the conversati­on, and sources say Canada pushed it off.

Freeland said it’s normal to put off the hardest topics.

The round played out under the cloud of multiple threats from U.S. President Donald Trump.

Entering the talks, he threatened to withdraw from NAFTA. On the final day, he announced plans to kill an amnesty program for young immigrants brought illegally into the U.S. by their parents. The latter was a huge story in Mexican media, including one frontpage newspaper that warned of the possible expulsion of more than 622,000 Mexicanbor­n people who registered for the program after former U.S. president Barack Obama created it.

Lighthizer was asked about his boss’s threats to terminate NAFTA. One account of the exchange, surfacing on Twitter, suggests Lighthizer refrained from echoing it. “I’m not taking that position,” a reporter with Inside U.S. Trade quoted Lighthizer as saying. “I want a good agreement.”

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