The Telegram (St. John's)

Trudeau tells Trump: We can have a deal right now, if you want it

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has reportedly told President Donald Trump that a NAFTA agreement is imminently within reach as long as some controvers­ial demands are set aside.

That high-level conversati­on occurred in the midst of what many insiders view as a last-ditch push for a renegotiat­ed agreement before impending political events pause the process until next year.

The characteri­zation of Trudeau’s message to Trump came in a television interview in Mexico: the economy minister in that country revealed some details of the leaders’ chat earlier this week.

When asked about his conversati­on with the U.S. president, Trudeau confirmed that he views a renegotiat­ed pact as promptly attainable and publicly repeated a similar message.

“There is very much an imminently achievable outcome that will be good for the United States, good for Canada, good for Mexico — and we’re very close,’’ Trudeau told a Calgary news conference.

“We will continue in the coming days to work hard to try and get there. We know that a deal is not done until it’s done. And we’re going to continue to remain optimistic and hard-working on trying to get this settled.’’

Asked whether he asked the president to pare down his wishlist, Trudeau said: “We’re pushing defence of our own interests, but highlighti­ng that it’s very possible to have a win-win-win.’’

The countries are attempting to set up one more ministeria­l round this week, after which it may become too late to meet the U.S. procedural deadlines required for a vote before the midterm elections bring in a new Congress.

All three countries have some interest in wrapping up a quick deal: Canada to calm jittery business investors, Mexico to close the file before its presidenti­al election and the U.S. to provide stability for struggling agricultur­al exporters.

They are swimming against a tide of unresolved issues and even competing agendas; insiders say there are mixed opinions

within the U.S. administra­tion on the value of additional rounds this week.

Months of efforts to close out the No. 1 issue of automobile­s has left a host of other irritants unfinished — including dairy, pharmaceut­icals, dispute resolution, public contracts and the U.S. demand for a five-year sunset clause.

Mexico’s lead minister says he doesn’t see a deal wrapping up by this week’s supposed target date. U.S. lawmakers say that if a deal doesn’t happen by Thursday, they won’t be able to schedule a vote this year and it’s possible the next Congress will want different things in the agreement.

Ildefonso Guajardo says it could happen soon, but probably not that soon.

“It is not easy. We don’t believe we’ll have it by Thursday,’’ Guajardo told Mexico’s Televisa network.

He also disputed the notion that there is a real deadline approachin­g — when the only thing that technicall­y changes as of this week is that American lawmakers can’t vote on the deal until 2019.

Guajardo said the U.S. needs to show flexibilit­y on some demands and he suggested Trudeau delivered a very similar message on Monday in his phone call with Trump.

“What Prime Minister Trudeau told him is there are the ingredient­s ... there for arriving at an agreement,’’ Guajardo said. “As of this moment, you could have a negotiated deal at any time . ...

“The problem is you need flexibilit­y from the parties.’’

He said the American side needs to drop some of its impractica­l, even contradict­ory proposals. He specifical­ly mentioned the U.S. idea of a sunset clause, which would automatica­lly end NAFTA after five years unless all three parties extend it.

Guajardo pointed to the chaos that could cause in the auto sector.

He said the U.S. is on the one hand forcing auto companies to spend the next few years reorganizi­ng their supply chains to comply with the rules of a new NAFTA, while at the same time telling companies NAFTA could end in five years.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looks on after announcing federal funding to improve traffic corridors in Edmonton Alta, on Tuesday.
CP PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looks on after announcing federal funding to improve traffic corridors in Edmonton Alta, on Tuesday.

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