The Province

Only a third of Canadians happy with new North American trade deal: Poll

- TOM BLACKWELL

TORONTO — There was a mood almost of elation when the federal government announced earlier this month it had finally reached a North American trade deal after months of high-pressure bargaining.

A new poll suggests those giddy feelings are not shared by the public.

Barely a third of Canadians are pleased with the United States Mexico Canada Agreement (USMCA), while 45 per cent are disappoint­ed, the Angus Reid Institute survey indicates. And half say Canadian negotiator­s — who gave up greater U.S. access to dairy and poultry markets here, among other concession­s — were overly soft in the talks, the poll concluded.

“Canadians are feeling significan­tly less euphoric about the pact than the government officials who negotiated it,” the polling organizati­on said in a news release.

The survey also indicates Canadians’ views of the United States have diminished in the course of the trade talks, with the lowest favourabil­ity ratings for their southern neighbour since the 1980s. About 49 per cent of those polled said they had a very or mostly favourable opinion of the U.S., down from 62 per cent in June 2016.

The results suggest the trade deal is unlikely to be a winning issue for the Liberal government in next year’s federal election, though it’s unclear whether it will become an electoral liability.

Talks to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement began a year and a half ago at U.S. President Donald Trump’s request, with Mexico and the U.S. shaking hands on a new pact in late August after five weeks of twoway talks. Canada reached an

agreement in principle with the U.S. and Mexico Sept. 30.

Canadian negotiator­s agreed to open more of the supply-managed dairy and poultry markets to American exports, extend the patent protection for certain prescripti­on drugs by two years and change copyright rules at the behest of the Americans.

But they preserved the “carve-out” from free-trade rules for cultural industries and kept NAFTA’s Chapter 19 system for resolving disputes over anti-dumping and anti-subsidy duties.

Asked for overall impression­s about the deal, 34 per cent were either pleased or

very pleased, while 45 per cent were disappoint­ed or very disappoint­ed. NDP and Conservati­ve voters tended to be more disappoint­ed than Liberal voters, according to the poll.

Close to 50 per cent of respondent­s felt the USMCA is worse than NAFTA, and only 18 per cent thought it was better.

Asked about bargaining performanc­e, 50 per cent said negotiator­s were “too soft/ gave up too much” to get a deal, while 39 per cent thought they struck the right balance and 11 per cent that they were too tough and uncompromi­sing.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland negotiated Canada’s part in the new USMCA with Mexico and the U.S.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland negotiated Canada’s part in the new USMCA with Mexico and the U.S.

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