Cape Times

Trump rethink on merit of Nafta accord

He won’t pull out, but wants a more favourable renegotiat­ed agreement

- Jill Colvin

PRESIDENT Donald Trump has told the leaders of Mexico and Canada that he will not pull out of the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) at this time, just hours after administra­tion officials said he was considerin­g a draft executive order to do just that.

The White House made the surprise announceme­nt on Wednesday in a readout of calls involving Trump, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

“President Trump agreed not to terminate Nafta at this time and the leaders agreed to proceed swiftly, according to their required internal procedures, to enable the renegotiat­ion of the Nafta deal to the benefit of all three countries,” said the White House.

Trump said that he “believes the end result will make all three countries stronger and better.”

Trudeau’s office issued a brief statement saying “the two leaders continued their dialogue on Canada-US trade relations, with the prime minister reinforcin­g the importance of stability and job growth in our trade relations.”

The White House announceme­nt came hours after administra­tion officials said Trump was considerin­g a draft executive order to withdraw the US from the deal – though administra­tion officials cautioned it was just one of a number of options being discussed by the president and his staff.

Some saw the threat as posturing by Trump to gain leverage over Mexico and Canada as he tried to negotiate changes to the deal.

Trump railed against the decades-old trade deal during his campaign, describing it a “disaster.” imports.

Trump said in an interview last week that he planned to either renegotiat­e or terminate Nafta, which he and other critics blame for wiping out US manufactur­ing jobs, because it allowed companies to move factories to Mexico to take advantage of low-wage labour.

“I am very upset with Nafta. I think Nafta has been a catastroph­ic trade deal for the US, trading agreement for the US. It hurts us with Canada, and it hurts us with Mexico,” he said.

A senior White House official declined to comment on “rumours” of specific actions.

But that official said Nafta has been a top priority for the president since day one and said the administra­tion has been working on it since taking office.

The Trump administra­tion last month submitted a vague set of guidelines to Congress for renegotiat­ing Nafta, disappoint­ing those who were expecting Trump to demand a major overhaul.

In an eight-page draft letter to Congress, acting US trade representa­tive Stephen Vaughn wrote that the administra­tion intended to start talking with Mexico and Canada about making changes to the pact, which took effect in 1994. – AP

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