The Niagara Falls Review

Canadian officials ready for NAFTA renegotiat­ion talks with U.S.

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OTTAWA — The Trump administra­tion is likely to quickly trigger the process that will lead to renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement, now that a new U.S. trade representa­tive has been confirmed, say two Trudeau cabinet ministers heading Canada’s side of the talks.

Internatio­nal Trade Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said he’ll likely get his first opportunit­y to meet face-to-face with Robert Lighthizer when the two attend an APEC minister’s summit this week.

The U.S. Senate approved Lighthizer as President Donald Trump’s trade czar on Thursday.

Soon after, Trump said it was his intention to quickly file a 90-day notice with Congress to kickstart the NAFTA talks with Canada and Mexico, a requiremen­t under U.S. law.

Canada maintains a solid footing for the negotiatio­ns, whenever they begin, Champagne told Global TV’s West Block.

“We are ready, we are prepared, and we’re going to see what they put on the table,” he said.

“But we’re going to be firm in our position as to protecting Canadian workers and protecting Canadian interests.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said she also expected to meet with Lighthizer soon, and that the pre-negotiatio­n process would likely start “very soon.”

With Lighthizer’s confirmati­on, “I think that the process ought to now get moving,” Freeland told CTV’s Question Period.

“And we’re enthusiast­ic about that,” she added.

“We’re keen to sit down at the table with our American and Mexican partners and to modernize what has been a really great trade agreement for our continent.”

The Trump administra­tion has signalled that it wants significan­t changes in a range of sectors, including dairy, lumber, automobile­s, pharmaceut­icals and the NAFTA dispute-resolution system.

Trump himself has said he expects “massive” changes, telling The Economist last week that “big isn’t a good enough word” to describe the negotiatio­ns.

But whether there is time for a “massive” restructur­ing of the longstandi­ng trade deal is being questioned by observers, who point out that Mexico has expressed a desire to get a new deal by early next year, before the Mexican election.

In the meantime, both Freeland and Champagne said Canada will continue pressing Ottawa’s position in behind-the-scenes discussion­s with political actors in the U.S.; that NAFTA has been a boon for jobs in both countries.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Francois-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Internatio­nal Trade, speaks to reporters at a Liberal cabinet retreat in Calgary, Alta., in January. The Trudeau government says it expects the Trump administra­tion to quickly trigger the process that will lead...
JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS Francois-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Internatio­nal Trade, speaks to reporters at a Liberal cabinet retreat in Calgary, Alta., in January. The Trudeau government says it expects the Trump administra­tion to quickly trigger the process that will lead...

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