Houston Chronicle

Canada factor may hurt U.S.-Mexico deal

Some lawmakers, industries demand country’s inclusion

- By Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump's drive to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement has taken an unexpected turn — one that complicate­s his effort to replace that deal with one more favorable to American workers.

Canada, America's longtime ally and No. 2 trading partner, was left out of a proposed deal Trump just reached with Mexico and is scrambling to keep its place in the regional free-trade bloc — and fend off the threat of U.S. taxes on its vehicles.

By contrast, Mexico, long the target of Trump's ire, has cut a preliminar­y deal with the United States to replace NAFTA with a pact that's meant, among other things, to shift more manufactur­ing into the United States.

In announcing the deal Monday, Trump said he wanted to call it the “United States-Mexico Trade Agreement,” pointedly omitting Canada.

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland hurried to Washington on Tuesday to try to repair the damage. But she doesn't have much time.

U.S. Trade Rep. Robert Lighthizer intends to formally notify Congress of the deal on Friday. This would begin a 90-day countdown that would allow Mexico's outgoing president, Enrique Pena Nieto, to sign the new pact before leaving office Dec. 1. Otherwise, President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador might want to reopen the negotiatio­ns and further complicate the prospects for a new agreement.

To intensify the pressure on Canada, Trump threatened Monday to slap taxes on Canadian auto imports. As a result, said Philip Levy, a senior fellow at the Chicago Council on Global affairs and a White House trade adviser in the administra­tion of President George W. Bush, Freeland is negotiatin­g “under threat of auto tariffs or the demolition of NAFTA.”

The Trump administra­tion says the deadline isn't as tight as it seems. After notifying Congress of the trade pact, it has 30 days to make public a copy of the full text.

“That means they have wriggle room” to fine-tune the details and squeeze Canada into a reimagined North American trade bloc, Levy said.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin sounded an optimistic note Tuesday.

“Our objective is to get Canada on board quickly,” Mnuchin told CNBC. “I don't anticipate there is going to be a lot of sticking points.”

Business groups and members of Congress are already demanding that Canada remain in the regional trade agreement.

When the Trump administra­tion notified Congress last year that it intended to renegotiat­e NAFTA, critics note that administra­tion said it would begin talks with both Canada and Mexico. It's unclear whether the Trump team even has authority to reach a pact with just one of those countries. And Congress, which has to approve any NAFTA rewrite, might refuse to endorse a deal that excludes Canada.

“I don't think we've seen something like this before,” said Stephen Orava, a trade lawyer who is a partner at the King & Spalding firm. “The path, both legally and politicall­y, is a lot more complicate­d and has a lot more land mines.”

After taking effect in 1994, NAFTA tore down most trade barriers among the United States, Canada and Mexico. Trade within the bloc soared. But many manufactur­ers moved plants south of the border to capitalize on lowwage Mexican labor and then shipped goods back to the United States.

During the presidenti­al campaign, Trump railed about the manufactur­ing jobs lost to Mexico and about the U.S. trade deficit with its southern neighbor: $69 billion last year.

This week's trade pact is meant to change the ground rules and return some manufactur­ing to the United States. Among other things, the U.S.-Mexico deal requires that 40 percent to 45 percent of car be made in a country with auto wages of at least $16 an hour in order to qualify for dutyfree status. Mexican auto workers earn an average of just over $5 an hour, Americans $22 an hour.

So if Mexico was the problem in Trump's view, how did Canada find itself in the crosshairs?

Canada, after all, is one of the few major economies that buy more goods and services from the United States than they sell. (The U.S. last year recorded a narrow trade surplus with Canada of nearly $3 billion.)

And having fought as allies in conflicts from World War I to Afghanista­n, the two neighbors are so close that the creators of television's “South Park” built an entire movie comedy around the laughable premise that they'd go to war with each other.

But flash points remained. The two countries have battled over U.S. charges that Canada dumps subsidized lumber in the American market and uses tariffs to protect its dairy farmers — topics likely to arise during Freeland's visit.

In some ways, the rift between the United States and Canada seems personal. Trump was enraged when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a news conference after a contentiou­s Group of Seven summit in June that he wouldn't let Canada be pushed around by Washington.

Trump's trade adviser Peter Navarro upped the ante by saying there was a “special place in hell” for Trudeau — a comment Navarro later said he regretted.

 ?? Cole Burston / Bloomberg ?? Commercial trucks drive across Ambassador Bridge on the Canada-U.S. border in Windsor, Ontario. Any omission of Canada in a new NAFTA-like deal troubles economists.
Cole Burston / Bloomberg Commercial trucks drive across Ambassador Bridge on the Canada-U.S. border in Windsor, Ontario. Any omission of Canada in a new NAFTA-like deal troubles economists.

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