Toronto Star

Trump’s vehicle-tariff threat adds pressure to NAFTA talks

Auto levies could also weigh on Canadian and Mexican markets

- JENNY LEONARD BLOOMBERG

WASHINGTON— U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to impose sweeping new tariffs on imported automobile­s may be an attempt to pressure his NAFTA partners into striking a deal that would help drive manufactur­ing jobs back to the U.S.

Trump directed Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on Wednesday to initiate a so-called Section 232 national-security investigat­ion into imports of cars, trucks and vehicle parts that could possibly lead to tariffs.

These investigat­ions can take months to conclude.

In the meantime, the clock is ticking to clinch a NAFTA deal that can be voted on by the current Congress this year. An agreement over auto-production rules has been one of the key sticking points in nine months of talks.

The looming threat of auto levies could further weigh on Mexico and Canada, which have a large stake in the U.S. auto market as the two biggest foreign suppliers of vehicles.

It’s “inconceiva­ble” that Canada would pose a threat to America’s security, Adam Austen, a spokespers­on for Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland, said in an email on Thursday.

“Canada and the United States have the greatest economic and security partnershi­p of any two countries in the world,” he said.

Any attempt to use the autoimport probe as leverage is unlikely to work, said Bill Reinsch, a former Clinton administra­tion commerce official who’s now a senior adviser at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

“A deal on autos is within reach but the other U.S. demands remain unresolved, and Canada and Mexico are not going to agree on autos without assurances on the other stuff,” Reinsch said. “I don’t see how bullying them on auto tariffs will change that. In addition, you’re talking about a process that is going to take some time.” The Commerce Department, which is leading the probe, said in a statement on Wednesday that automobile manufactur­ing “has long been a significan­t source of American technologi­cal innovation.”

The investigat­ion will examine whether the decline of the U.S. automobile sector threatens to weaken the U.S. economy by reducing research and developmen­t, skilled jobs and more advanced manufactur­ing processes like electric and autonomous vehicles, Commerce said.

Hours before the announceme­nt of the investigat­ion on Wednesday, Trump said on Twitter that “big news” was “coming soon for our great American Autoworker­s. After many decades of losing your jobs to other countries, you have waited long enough!” ‘Not smart’ Linda Hasenfratz, chief executive officer of Canada-based auto-parts maker Linamar Corp., said it’s “ludicrous” to suggest vehicle imports from Canada and Mexico represent a security risk.

“This is clearly a negotiatin­g tactic to draw to a close the ongoing NAFTA negotiatio­ns and other trade disputes,” she said in a statement Thursday. “While I support coming to an agreement on NAFTA to eliminate that uncertaint­y and allow us to all get back to business, I certainly don’t support a tactic which will drive inflation and ultimately economic recession.”

More than half of the cars built in Canada are made by American manufactur­ers with a majority of U.S. content, said Flavio Volpe, president of the Toronto-based Automotive Parts Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n. Tariffs would “punish American companies, suppliers and customers. This is not smart,” Volpe said.

The Trump administra­tion has already stoked tensions with Canada and Mexico by threatenin­g to impose permanent tariffs on imported steel and aluminum if they don’t agree to successful­ly conclude a revamped NAFTA.

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