Truro News

Worker protection­s paramount in NAFTA talks, labour minister says

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Protecting workers’ rights is a fundamenta­l Canadian objective in ongoing negotiatio­ns to update the free-trade agreement with the United States and Mexico, Labour Minister Patty Hajdu said on Friday after consultati­ons with key union representa­tives.

Saying organized labour is squarely behind the federal government’s push for the incorporat­ion of “progressiv­e” rules in the North American Free Trade Agreement, Hajdu said it’s critical the three countries reach a common understand­ing about the rights of labour and its importance to a healthy economy.

“The rights of Canadian workers is far from ‘virtue signalling’,” Hajdu said in an interview with The Canadian Press. “It’s about ensuring that we don’t have a race to the bottom where companies can move their labour to other countries that don’t have those protection­s for workers.”

Friday’s meeting came days after a number of pro-trade Republican­s met with U.S. President Donald Trump to urge him not to cancel NAFTA as he has threatened. The latest round of talks wrapped in Mexico City late last month, with negotiator­s saying they made little progress on key issues.

Canada’s labour movement has long expressed concerns about lower wages in Mexico and what they see as substandar­d worker protection­s in “right- to- work” American states. Canada has ratified all eight core convention­s of the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on and its proposals on NAFTA include a demand the other two countries follow suit.

While Mexico has gone some distance toward ratificati­on, the U.S. has largely resisted such a move.

Hajdu called the right to organize and bargain collective­ly a fundamenta­l right of workers, saying a strong labour movement is inextricab­ly linked to a thriving middle class. Canada, she said, plans to stand firm in its demands to improve on the decades-old trade deal.

“We expect this (deal) to be better than what we had in the previous NAFTA arrangemen­t,” Hajdu said. “We’re not going to back down and accept a deal that doesn’t protect the rights of Canada — and part of that is protecting our labour movement, part of that is protecting our workers.”

Among those on hand for the discussion­s were representa­tives of the country’s largest privateand public-sector unions, Unifor and the Canadian Union of Public Employees, and the umbrella Canadian Labour Congress. The groups were pleased Hajdu had taken the time, said Steven Martin, business manager with Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers Local 353 that hosted the event.

Martin called it “huge for labour” that the minister was undertakin­g the consultati­ons.

“It was very reassuring to see that the government is asking labour about labour issues and what our thoughts are,” Martin said. “It’s not just the wages. It also has to do with the difference­s in working standards, and a race the bottom is not the way that we need to go.”

Talks at renegotiat­ing NAFTA resume in Washington next week after several rocky rounds in which Canada’s labour demands — including gender-equality language — have been among obstacles yet to be overcome.

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