Global Times

Canada’s Trudeau fights for NAFTA amid contentiou­s new US demands

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Contentiou­s new US demands are set to hit NAFTA negotiatin­g tables on Wednesday, threatenin­g to push modernizat­ion talks toward collapse as Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau again tries to remind US President Donald Trump of the trade pact’s merits.

Trudeau will meet with Trump and trade-focused US lawmakers on the North American Free Trade Agreement while hundreds of negotiator­s, government officials and lobbyists from Canada, Mexico and the US descend on a hotel in Arlington, Virginia for a fourth round of talks.

The Canadian leader’s visit comes amid increasing acrimony over NAFTA renegotiat­ions, with Trump making fresh threats to terminate the 23-year-old agreement and the US Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday accusing Trump’s administra­tion of trying to sabotage the talks with “poison pill proposals.”

Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray warned that an end to NAFTA would mark a breaking point in USMexican relations and affect bilateral cooperatio­n in non-trade areas.

The NAFTA talks are likely to stall in the face of aggressive US demands to sharply increase content requiremen­ts for autos and auto parts, trade experts say.

The Washington round promises to be difficult, with Mexican sources saying the talks are expected to be extended by two days to October 17.

People briefed on the US proposals said that the North American content threshold for automotive would rise to 85 percent from the current 62.5 percent, with a 50 percent US-specific content requiremen­t.

“These will be met with widespread opposition from Canada and Mexico. I think it’s just a bridge too far,” said Wendy Cutler, the Asia Society’s Washington policy director and former chief US negotiator for the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade deal canceled by Trump.

Other contentiou­s US proposals opposed by Canada, Mexico and US business interests include a five-year sunset provision, radical changes to NAFTA’s dispute arbitratio­n systems, changes to intellectu­al property provisions and new protection­s for US seasonal produce growers.

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