The Guardian (Charlottetown)

States that voted Trump would lose in NAFTA pullout: chamber

-

A new projection from the biggest business lobby in the United States shows the 12 states that would likely feel the impact of NAFTA’s cancellati­on the most also voted for Donald Trump.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has stepped up its efforts to save the North American Free Trade Agreement amid threats of an American pullout.

The group’s newest projection shows the states exporting the most to Canada and Mexico in total dollars, or as a percentage of their overall global exports.

Trump won all 12 states Michigan, Wisconsin, North Dakota, Texas, Missouri, Ohio, Iowa, Indiana, Arizona, Nebraska, Pennsylvan­ia and North Carolina - which delivered more than half his electoral college votes.

The current round of talks, underway in Mexico City, is expected to represent a calm between two storms. The countries have now made their demands on key issues, but are likely still months away from revealing their bottom lines.

Officials have played down expectatio­ns for this week’s talks. The lead NAFTA ministers for the three countries aren’t even attending the Mexico round, and Canadian officials suggest there won’t likely be movement on the most controvers­ial issues.

Canada and Mexico have suggested one potential area for compromise - the U.S. idea of regular reviews of the agreement - but don’t want it to include a so-called terminatio­n clause. The Trump administra­tion wants the agreement to lapse after five years unless all three countries agree to extend it.

That’s one of several U.S. demands that shocked observers - Canada, Mexico, numerous American lawmakers, and the business community. Several dozen U.S. lawmakers wrote to the administra­tion this week expressing concern.

And the Chamber of Commerce has begun organizing regular NAFTA events in an effort to save the agreement. It released its projection­s in an op-ed today headlined, “Which States Would Be Hit Hardest by Withdrawin­g from NAFTA?”

“Imagine the scene: The U.S. unemployme­nt rate is climbing. Crops in the heartland are rotting. Manufactur­ers are moving abroad. Consumer prices are rising,” the piece begins.

“That’s the picture painted.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO ?? A Qantas Dreamliner aircraft is shown in an undated handout image.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO A Qantas Dreamliner aircraft is shown in an undated handout image.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada