Times Colonist

NAFTA revision to include 3 countries: minister

- LINDA NGUYEN

TORONTO — All three NAFTA members will be at the table whenever talks to revise the trade deal get underway, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Tuesday amid concerns that Mexico could get short shrift.

Freeland stressed the importance of the trilateral relationsh­ip between Canada, Mexico and the U.S. as the three countries prepare to negotiate changes to the North American Free Trade Agreement.

“There is no negotiatio­n process yet. In fact, the United States does not yet have a team in place that could even begin those negotiatio­ns, so let’s not put the cart before the horse,” Freeland told a panel that included her Mexican counterpar­t, Luis Videgaray, at the Canadian Council for the Americas.

“But we very much recognize that NAFTA is a three-country agreement and were there to be any negotiatio­ns, those would be three-way negotiatio­ns.”

Some have expressed concerns that Mexico could end up losing under a renegotiat­ed NAFTA, given U.S. President Donald Trump’s intent to cut America’s trade deficit with that country.

Those worries were amplified last week when, after meeting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Trump said he only wanted to “tweak” his country’s trade relationsh­ip with Canada while looking for more major changes to U.S.-Mexican trade ties.

Speaking at the Canadian Council for the Americas event, former prime minister Brian Mulroney said he doesn’t believe Ottawa will throw Mexico “under the bus,” as some have suggested. “This under-the-bus stuff is for losers, not for winners, and Canada is a winner,” Mulroney said.

Mulroney, one of the architects of NAFTA, said Canada may face a “rough negotiatio­n,” but he believes the country will emerge with better relationsh­ips with the U.S. and Mexico in the end.

“We’re going to come out of this in one piece — with a strong NAFTA and a strong bilateral and trilateral relationsh­ip,” he told the crowd in Toronto.

Two tough issues for Canada during NAFTA discussion­s with the U.S. will be provisions governing trade dispute settlement and rules of origin, Mulroney added.

Trump has called NAFTA the worst trade deal the U.S. has ever negotiated and has vowed to revisit, or even scrap it, in favour of protection­ist measures.

Mulroney, who has been friends and neighbours with Trump in Palm Beach, Florida, for years, said he felt Canada’s case “was advanced enormously” by Trudeau’s meeting with the president. “I got the American verdict on Mr. Trudeau’s visit last week and he got high marks,” he said. “Let’s just leave it at that.”

Following that meeting, Canada and the U.S. released a joint statement declaring that they will work at creating jobs, and continue talks on regulatory issues to make them more businessfr­iendly and cut costs without compromisi­ng health, safety, and environmen­tal standards.

Trade relations with the U.S. are critical to Canada. More than 75 per cent of Canada’s exports go to the U.S., with more than $2 billion US in trade happening between the two countries each day.

Meanwhile, Canada should work to strengthen its ties with China and other countries while ensuring it maintains a good relationsh­ip with the United States, former prime minister Paul Martin said Tuesday.

While Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has sought to deepen Canada’s ties to China, he’s also building a relationsh­ip with Trump, who has taken an anti-China stance in many of his comments.

“The Trudeau government should do exactly what it’s doing, which is to look to our needs,” Martin said. “And our needs require that we have good relationsh­ips with the United States and that we should establish sound relations with other countries — including China.”

Martin said pension reform is one of the areas where Canada and China have common interests, because each faces the challenge of a retirement population that’s growing faster than its workforce.

Canada and China will each have only 2.5 workers per retiree by 2046 — compared with Canada’s current ratio of four-toone and China’s ratio of about seven-to-one as of 2016, according to the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board.

 ??  ?? Former Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney said Canada will face a “rough negotiatio­n” when the three sides eventually sit down for a NAFTA rewrite.
Former Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney said Canada will face a “rough negotiatio­n” when the three sides eventually sit down for a NAFTA rewrite.

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