Truro News

We should be arguing about NAFTA’S future

- Thomas Walkom Thomas Walkom is writer with the Toronto Star.

The impasse in the North American Free Trade Agreement talks is commonly viewed as a setback for Canada. It is not.

The fact that no agreement may be reached until after the U.S. Congressio­nal midterm elections in November gives Canadians – and Canadian political parties – a chance to hold the debate we have never had:

Do we want to continue within the broad parameters of a deal that firmly binds the economies of Canada, the U.S. and Mexico? Or do we want something fundamenta­lly different?

Up to now, Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government has successful­ly presented the NAFTA renegotiat­ion as a non-partisan national emergency, one that requires all hands on deck.

To that end, it has co-opted potential critics, including former Conservati­ve cabinet ministers Rona Ambrose and James Moore, as well as prominent New Democrat Brian Topp, onto a NAFTA advisory council.

Trudeau has also enlisted former Conservati­ve prime minister Brian Mulroney as a high-profile supporter of the cause. The NAFTA talks represent arguably the government’s most important file.

But except for occasional sniping in the Commons from NDP internatio­nal trade critic Tracey Ramsey, the opposition parties have given the Liberals a pass.

In the media, the talks tend to be presented as a long-running sporting event – or perhaps morality play – that pits plucky Team Canada against the evil forces of U.S. President Donald Trump.

There has been little questionin­g of Trudeau’s goal, which is to “modernize” the agreement while leaving its fundamenta­ls unchanged. But the hiatus caused by the U.S. mid-terms gives Canadians a chance to debate the content of NAFTA.

Do we want to continue on with a deal that draws manufactur­ing jobs to low-wage Mexico? Or is there some virtue in Trump’s idea of demanding that manufactur­ers, in order to qualify for NAFTA status, must pay higher wages?

Do we want to keep the so-called Chapter 11 provision that allows foreign investors to overturn domestic laws and regulation­s? Or do we want to scrap it altogether?

Do we want to rely on a deal that has proven itself unable to resist unwarrante­d U. S. trade sanctions against aluminum, steel and softwood lumber?

Is there any point in encouragin­g continenta­l economic integratio­n through NAFTA if, as in the case of steel, that integratio­n leaves Canada more vulnerable to U.S. punitive actions?

There is bound to be a debate in Mexico’s upcoming presidenti­al election campaign about what kind of NAFTA that country wants.

There is bound to be a debate of some kind in the U.S., particular­ly among Democrats, many of whom are already critical of the pact.

Indeed, if the Democrats end up controllin­g the House of Representa­tives in November, the future of NAFTA may be up in the air.

In Canada, any debate so far has taken place along the edges. Political economist Gordon Laxer, for instance, has co-authored a report titled “NAFTA 2.0” that calls for changes to the deal in order to take on climate change.

In particular, he would scrap a so- called proportion­ality rule that he says locks Canada into producing tarsands oil for export to the U. S.

Laxer’s argument may not convince everyone. But at least he is talking about the content of any renegotiat­ed NAFTA deal.

Perhaps Canada’s opposition parties too will find their voices.

There is nothing treasonous about critiquing the government’s handling of trade talks. In the early ’90s, the opposition Liberals and New Democrats were happy to attack the then-governing Tories over the original NAFTA deal. A reinsertio­n of sensible politics into the current Canada-u.s. negotiatio­ns would be welcome.

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