The Province

NAFTA negotiator has ‘depth of knowledge’

Trump point man formerly praised accord

- ALEXANDER PANETTA THE CANADIAN PRESS

WASHINGTON — While the U.S. president trashes NAFTA as a one-sided, job-killing disaster possibly worth scrapping, the man who will lead the American negotiatin­g team when talks start this week is an old proponent of the accord.

U.S. chief negotiator John Melle has sung NAFTA's praises in the past.

He's a career bureaucrat and unlike the boss in several ways: mastery of details, encycloped­ic knowledge of Canada and Mexico, understate­d sense of humour and a work vocabulary that forgoes talk of good guys versus bad.

Melle's world view, according to friends, is that nobody's a saint when it comes to free trade; everyone's a bit of a protection­ist sinner, and, if their mutual interests align, they just might get along to a get a deal.

He once praised the three-way pact with Canada and Mexico before the U.S. Congress.

“NAFTA partners today are not only better customers of one another, but better neighbours, more committed partners and more effective colleagues,” Melle told a Senate hearing on NAFTA's 12th anniversar­y, in 2006.

He listed positive developmen­ts in the United States since NAFTA, which he worked on earlier in his career at the office of the United States Trade Representa­tive.

He cited a major unemployme­nt drop — from 7.1 per cent in the dozen years preNAFTA, to 5.1 per cent in the years after; a near-doubling in the growth rate of U.S. industrial production; even a five-fold increase in the growth rate of manufactur­ing output.

The first round of negotiatio­ns for a new NAFTA begins Wednesday in Washington.

A Canadian friend says both countries are lucky Melle is at the table.

Laura Dawson said talks will be less problem-prone than under someone with superficia­l knowledge of the trade file who needs a primer on every issue.

Melle apparently carries a trade encycloped­ia in his head.

“I've been doing trade for 20 years,” said Dawson. “And John has forgotten more than I ever knew. On an issue like softwood lumber when I would be like, 'How does this work? And what happens there?' he could go back through all the iterations of softwood and explain how this worked, and that, and why. Just a depth of knowledge.”

A former supervisor says the depth of experience gives him hope the countries might achieve the otherwise impossible mission handed them: completing a trade negotiatio­n in just a few months, before the Mexican election.

The negotiator­s know their files and each other and can start working quickly, said Robert Holleyman, a former deputy U.S. trade representa­tive.

Chris Sands, a Canada-watcher at Johns Hopkins University, said Melle won't mind being tough with Canadians.

Sands said the northern neighbour has a habit of resorting to the victim card in talks with the U.S., arguing for a better deal because it's friendly or harmless to the U.S. That won't work on Melle, Sands said. Unlike some in the U.S. government, he said, Melle does not see the neighbour through rose-coloured glasses. Rather, he's a clear-eyed realist for whom nations act in their own perceived interest.

 ?? — CP FILES ?? JOHN MELLE
— CP FILES JOHN MELLE

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