Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Mexico says it expects U.S. Congress to start formal trade deal approval soon

- ANTHONY ESPOSITO

MEXICO CITY Mexico expects U.S. lawmakers to soon begin the process of approving a new trade deal between the two countries and Canada now that President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has promised wage increases and funding for labour reforms, a senior Mexican official said on Friday.

The United States-mexico-canada Agreement (USMCA) must win approval in a divided U.S. Congress where Republican­s control the Senate and Democrats control the House of Representa­tives. While Republican­s back the agreement negotiated by U.S. President Donald Trump, Democrats led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have expressed concerns about its labour and enforcemen­t provisions.

Trump continued on Friday to rail against “do-nothing Democrats” for failing to pass the trade agreement.

“We need USMCA passed. It’s a great deal for our country, for our farmers, manufactur­ers, unions,” he told reporters. “I appreciate Republican­s are just outraged and the American public is outraged that the do-nothing Democrats are doing nothing.”

Republican lawmakers have accused Pelosi and the Democrats of stalling work on the trade deal to avoid handing a victory to Trump, but Democrats say they are working closely with the U.S. Trade Representa­tive’s office to get their concerns addressed.

The USMCA, which would replace the $1 trillion North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), risks getting bogged down in the 2020 U.S. presidenti­al election race if U.S. lawmakers do not ratify it soon.

“The progress made in dialogue with Speaker Pelosi and U.S. lawmakers and negotiator­s makes us think that the end to this complex story is near, that soon we will see the United States initiate the formal process of approval of the trade deal,” Mexico’s deputy foreign minister for North America,

Jesus Seade, said at Lopez Obrador’s daily news conference.

The Mexican president has promised wage hikes and other labour provisions in a campaign to convince U.S. Democratic lawmakers to ratify USMCA.

“I think we’re getting there,” Seade said when asked if Mexico’s push to convince U.S. lawmakers about its commitment to implementi­ng the labour reforms was working.

In a letter addressed to Pelosi, Lopez Obrador called for ratificati­on “soon” so as to avoid having the electoral process in the United States “impede or delay” the deal’s finalizati­on.

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