The Telegram (St. John's)

Liberals face new deadline

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Canada is facing a fresh deadline to land a trade deal with the United States and save its place in the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Trade experts say Canada and the U.S. need to present a text to the U.S. Congress by Oct. 1 in order to join the deal the Trump administra­tion signed with Mexico last week.

The overall goal is to reach a deal by a Dec. 1 deadline so Congress can give its approval to a new NAFTA before Mexico’s new president takes office.

Otherwise, U.S. President Donald Trump says he will move ahead on a deal with Mexico that excludes Canada.

The politicall­y sensitive deadlines form a key challenge for Canadian and American negotiator­s as they resume their talks today in Washington.

Canadian negotiator­s are set to return to the bargaining table facing an unpredicta­ble U.S. president and trying to protect Canada’s cultural and dairy sector from American demands in NAFTA renegotiat­ions.

The two sides broke off talks Friday as Trump formally notified Congress of the deal with Mexico, saying Canada might join later.

But in recent days he has taken a defiant tone on Twitter that some trade experts are dismissing as his usual negotiatin­g bluster.

“Congress will support Canada throughout September. After that, Congress will have a tough choice to make in terms of going forward with a good deal with Mexico, opening Mexico’s agricultur­al markets as we brace for the long haul with China,” said Dan Ujczo, an Ohio-based trade lawyer with Dickinson Wright.

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