Truro News

Let’s make a deal

Trump explains why he didn’t cancel NAFTA, but still could if he wanted

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U.S. President Donald Trump insists he wasn’t bluffing about threatenin­g to pull out of NAFTA this week. He says he was two or three days away from doing it – really. But he also says he had a change of heart during phone calls with the leaders of Canada and Mexico.

“I like both of these gentlemen very much,” Trump said Thursday, recapping this week’s roller-coaster of drama involving the North American Free Trade Agreement. “I respect their countries very much. The relationsh­ip is very special. And I said, I will hold on the terminatio­n; let’s see if we can make it a fair deal.”

He also hinted at a more substantiv­e reason for not announcing a pullout of NAFTA: economic disruption.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Trump appeared to be thinking about pulling out of NAFTA before the duo spoke by phone on Wednesday evening.

But Trudeau told reporters in Saskatchew­an he reminded Trump they both were elected on a similar platform of helping people find and keep jobs.

The prime minister says he pointed out that a lot of jobs and industries were developed

under NAFTA – if the deal were cancelled, it would create too much disruption.

Trudeau says that the two agreed they could sit down and work on ways to make the deal better, a renegotiat­ion process similar to what’s been done in the past.

Reworking the agreement had been one of Trump’s key campaign promises, but it’s up against a clock.

The U.S. Congress has yet to authorize negotiatio­ns and there might be less than a year to get a deal before the Mexican election.

The mere rumour of it happening this week, floated by the White House, shaved almost two per cent off the Mexican peso and a third of a cent off the loonie, while businessme­n and lawmakers were up in arms.

Just the agricultur­e industry by itself produced enough scared quotes to fill a newscast. Pork producers called the idea of cancelling NAFTA financiall­y devastatin­g. Corn producers called it disastrous. The head of the U.S. grains lobby said he was shocked and distressed.

Trump conceded that renegotiat­ing NAFTA is simpler: “And so I decided (to do that) rather than terminatin­g NAFTA, which would be a pretty big shock to the system.”

He emphasized, however, that he retains the right to cancel NAFTA if he can’t get a deal.

And that, according to numerous trade-watchers, is what this week was really about: leverage. It’s a view shared by some within the Canadian government – that Trump wants to flex some muscle entering the negotiatio­ns, and the threat to pull out is his strongest lever.

That lever was brandished this week when stories started appearing in the Washington Post, Politico, CNN and the New York Times that sources within the White House were really, seriously, considerin­g a draft executive order to cancel NAFTA.

“I think the draft EO was a negotiatin­g ploy. True to Trump’s style. The only surprise was the quick reversal,” said Gary Hufbauer of the Peterson Institute, a top U.S. NAFTA expert.

 ?? CP PhOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Donald Trump take part in a joint news conference at the White House. Trump says he didn’t announce the cancellati­on of NAFTA this week because he likes Trudeau and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto.
CP PhOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Donald Trump take part in a joint news conference at the White House. Trump says he didn’t announce the cancellati­on of NAFTA this week because he likes Trudeau and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto.

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