Windsor Star

Talks to start in August: Freeland

Countries face time crunch

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

WASHINGTON The Canadian government says it expects negotiatio­ns to start this summer for a new North American Free Trade Agreement.

“NAFTA negotiatio­ns will start in August — not September,” Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Monday in the House of Commons. A time crunch is looming, with the U.S. and Mexico in the biggest hurry to start talks.

Pre-negotiatio­n consultati­ons will take several months. Then once talks begin between Canada, Mexico and the U.S., there are only a few months left before political obstacles start popping up, causing potential delays.

Here’s what the calendar looks like: May: Countries are now consulting domestic actors as they prepare negotiatin­g positions.

Formal consultati­ons are well underway in Mexico, and have just begun in the U.S.

June: Canada begins its formal consultati­ons. Freeland must also deliver a memorandum to cabinet, and receive a mandate to lead Canada’s negotiatin­g team.

June 27: The United States holds a public hearing in Washington, where American stakeholde­rs will share their ideas for the talks.

July 17: The U.S. must publish, around this date, a detailed summary of its objectives for these negotiatio­ns. Under U.S. law, the document must appear on a publicly available website and be regularly updated thereafter.

Aug. 16: Negotiatio­ns can begin anytime after this date, which marks the end of the 90-day consultati­on period required by U.S. domestic law. At that point, American negotiator­s are finally allowed to sit with their foreign peers.

Fall: Mexican presidenti­al primaries begin. It’s decision time for the man leading Mexico’s NAFTA negotiatio­ns. Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray will have to decide whether he intends to turn his focus to seeking the presidenti­al nomination for his party, the ruling PRI.

Winter: The Mexican and U.S. government­s have said they want negotiatio­ns wrapped up by the first quarter of 2018. Otherwise they risk affecting — and being affected by — Mexico’s presidenti­al election. The current front-runner in the polls, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, is a left-wing, Trump-bashing NAFTA critic. Numerous observers have called this an impossible deadline.

June 30, 2018: The current U.S. fast-track law expires. It could be extended three years — as long as the president requests it, and there is no resolution disavowing it from either the U.S. House or Senate. This law is considered a must for concluding any trade deal with the United States.

July 1, 2018: Mexico holds its presidenti­al election.

Nov. 6, 2018: U.S. holds its midterm elections.

Dec. 1, 2018: Inaugurati­on Day for Mexico’s new president.

Oct. 21, 2019: Canada’s next federal election.

 ??  ?? Chrystia Freeland
Chrystia Freeland

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