Times Colonist

U.S. trade czar lauds new NAFTA deal

- JAMES McCARTEN

WASHINGTON — North America’s new trade agreement finally became the law of the land Wednesday, complete with a celebrator­y warning from the Trump administra­tion that the United States intends to make sure Canada and Mexico live up to their end of the bargain.

U.S. trade ambassador Robert Lighthizer lauded the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement as Donald Trump’s signature achievemen­t, a landmark trade pact that tilts the benefits of continenta­l managed trade back toward workers, farmers and labourers and away from the giant corporatio­ns that reaped the rewards of its NAFTA predecesso­r.

“That’s a monumental change,” Lighthizer said in a statement that promised more jobs, protection­s for workers, wider access to continenta­l markets and new growth opportunit­ies for businesses of all sizes.

“We have worked closely with the government­s of Mexico and Canada to ensure that the obligation­s and responsibi­lities of all three nations under the agreement have been met, and we will continue to do so to ensure the USMCA is enforced.”

While the White House and scores of Trump allies in Washington tweeted partisan support for the occasion, the president himself spent the morning preoccupie­d with some of his favourite foils: the “fake news” mainstream media, Black Lives Matter supporters and presumptiv­e Democrat presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden.

The USTR also named 10 people to its roster of arbitrator­s under the agreement’s disputeset­tlement mechanism, a list that includes Julie Bedard, a graduate of McGill University and former Supreme Court of Canada clerk who heads the internatio­nal litigation and arbitratio­n group for the Americas at Skadden, a prominent New York law firm.

Other names on the U.S. list include former chief federal claims judge Susan Braden, D.C. arbitratio­n expert John Buckley Jr., former internatio­nal trade commission­er Dennis Devaney and ex-federal prosecutor Mark Hansen.

The agreement, known in Canadian government circles as CUSMA, is designed to ensure more people in all three countries can reap its benefits — the principal U.S. complaint about the old NAFTA, said Kirsten Hillman, Canada’s ambassador to the U.S.

“The original NAFTA was extremely successful for us economical­ly, and that’s important to remember,” Hillman said in an interview. “It was, though — as we all know — dated, and also it was perceived to be, I think fairly so in some respects, not sufficient for ensuring that the benefits of trade were fully utilized by all segments of our society.”

Not everyone is celebratin­g the agreement’s coming into force. Canadian dairy producers and processors, who will see increased U.S. competitio­n in their domestic markets and limits on exports of key products like diafiltere­d milk and infant formula, have assailed the federal Liberal government for allowing the agreement to come into force before August.

Waiting a month would have given the industry a full year to adjust to the terms of the deal, since Canada’s dairy year begins Aug. 1. But now, producers and processors have just 31 days before the ‘year two’ provisions in the agreement take effect next month.

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