Chicago Sun-Times

Trump’s new trade agreement gets a few things right while falling short

- JESSE JACKSON jjackson@rainbowpus­h.org | @RevJJackso­n

TRUMP’S DEAL MAKES SOME SIGNIFICAN­T REFORMS THAT SHOULD BE APPLAUDED.

Donald Trump on Monday announced a new NAFTA draft treaty, renamed for showtime as the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

Canada, ignoring Trump’s insults and gibes, threats and posturing, joined Mexico in making a deal. The new pact contains some much-needed reforms — and falls glaringly short in critical areas. Auto workers and truckers get some relief. Big oil and Big Pharma get paid off. The prices of prescripti­on drugs will go up in Canada and Mexico.

For Trump, the agreement is about politics. He set the arbitrary deadline for signatures so that he might have a revised draft agreement to trumpet during the runup to the November elections. For working people, particular­ly manufactur­ing workers and farmers, the show is less important than the substance. And the substance is a very mixed bag.

Trump is to be applauded for forcing the renegotiat­ion, despite the hand-wringing of the corporate trade advocates in both parties. In many ways, he had little choice.

Working people had paid a huge price under the original NAFTA and demanded change. Labor unions built a large coalition against NAFTA and future agreements like it, including the Trans Pacific Partnershi­p.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren led the assault on the outrageous private legal system that NAFTA and other agreements set up for corporatio­ns, giving them the right to sue the U.S. before private tribunals with corporate lawyers acting as judges. Sen. Sherrod Brown and Rep. Rosa DeLauro built the coalition that made it clear that the TPP would never gain approval from the Congress.

By the time of the 2016 election, every major candidate — Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump — announced their opposition to the TPP and criticized NAFTA. Trump was savvy enough to make trade and NAFTA a centerpiec­e of his economic argument in the campaign.

Trump’s deal makes some significan­t reforms that should be applauded. It reins in the outrageous Investor State Dispute Settlement, curbing the ability of corporatio­ns to use private tribunals to collect millions and attack environmen­tal and health policies. It raises safety standards on trucks coming from Mexico, a significan­t concern for citizens across the country.

It increases the North American (read Mexico, Canada and U.S.) domestic content for tariff free automobile­s and auto parts from 62.5 percent to 75 percent, which should help retain some jobs from being shipped to lowwage producers across the seas.

It contains a truly innovative provision requiring that 30 percent of work done on automobile­s be carried out by workers mak- ing at least $16 per hour. That helps protect workers in the U.S. and Canada, since it is three times the prevailing wage in Mexico.

It is, however, truly deplorable that the floor on autoworker­s wages is $16 an hour, in contrast with the wages that they used to get before NAFTA.

But there is much in Trump’s new trade deal that reflects the corrupt corporate dealings of the old NAFTA. Big oil won the ability to sustain the private tribunals for its operations in Mexico. Big Pharma won increased monopoly protection­s. The price of drugs will go up in Canada and Mexico and stay up in the U.S. as a result of this agreement.

More work remains to be done. As Lori Wallach of Citizen Trade Watch notes, “Unless there are strong labor and environmen­tal standards that are subject to swift and certain enforcemen­t, U.S. firms will continue to outsource jobs to pay Mexican workers poverty wages, dump toxins and bring their products back here for sale.”

Worse, Trump’s agreement waives buyAmerica­n protection­s for U.S. procuremen­t, leading to the continued outsourcin­g of U.S. jobs created from taxpayers’ money.

Canada and Mexico are our largest trading partners, with $1.2 trillion in trade between the three nations. Canada is the largest recipient of U.S. exports, our secondlarg­est trading partner and our second-largest investor. Canada is a NATO ally whose soldiers have fought and died at our side.

We also have a huge stake in Mexico’s economic welfare. Part of the horrors of the first NAFTA was that it disrupted peasant agricultur­e in Mexico, forcing many workers to head north to care for their families. The resulting tensions from immigratio­n — legal and illegal — have had a poisonous effect in our politics, with Trump and others profiting from an ugly, racialized posturing. Getting this right is important. Sadly, the deal, while an improvemen­t over the old one, doesn’t get it right. Labor rights and environmen­tal protection­s still lack serious enforcemen­t. Mexico’s ability to pursue a clear economic course is circumscri­bed by protection­s of Big Oil and Big Pharma, among others.

Trump deserves credit for renegotiat­ing NAFTA, something that his Democratic and Republican predecesso­rs failed to do. Trump will no doubt use the new agreement as a centerpiec­e of his claim of “Promises made, promises kept.” A more accurate descriptio­n would be “Promises made, performanc­e lacking.”

 ?? LARS HAGBERG/AFP ?? The Trump administra­tion has worked out a new trade agreement with Canada and Mexico.
LARS HAGBERG/AFP The Trump administra­tion has worked out a new trade agreement with Canada and Mexico.
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