Houston Chronicle

U.S. should stay in NAFTA while negotiatin­g future

- By Will Hurd

Significan­t uncertaint­y exists about the future of the trilateral trade relationsh­ip between the United States, Mexico and Canada. NAFTA created one of the world’s largest free trade areas and has had undeniable benefits to the U.S. Unfortunat­ely, we should be prepared for President Donald Trump to make good on his promise to pull out of the agreement.

In recent months, President Trump has made several decisions that were contrary to our national interests, taking serious steps to withdraw U.S. forces from Syria and Afghanista­n. Withdrawin­g from NAFTA to pressure Congress to support its replacemen­t, the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), would continue this pattern. However, this new agreement is far from having the necessary votes to pass. The Trump administra­tion must address the concerns many in Congress have about several of the new policies in the USMCA as well as some of the president’s trade policies in general.

The world has significan­tly changed in the 25 years since NAFTA went into effect. A trade agreement made over two decades ago could not have possibly predicted the world we live in now, and that’s why it needs to be updated the right way. The USMCA makes important improvemen­ts that should become standards for future trade agreements, including:

A framework for digital trade in goods and services that bans customs duties on digital products, requires the enactment of anti-spam rules in each country and bars countries from requiring that companies maintain their servers locally instead of in the United States.

Improved protection­s for intellectu­al property that extend patent protection on drugs, require internet service providers to address online violations and provide greater protection against trademark infringeme­nt.

New restrictio­ns on state-owned enterprise­s that prevent them from pursuing discrimina­tory practices against commercial competitor­s, which will help American businesses compete in Canada and Mexico.

A provision that prevents non-market economies, like China, from unfairly taking advantage of liberalize­d trade in North America.

Despite these significan­t improvemen­ts, this administra­tion made serious mistakes in pursuing other changes, like its unilateral decision to weaken the investment-state dispute settlement (ISDS) arbitratio­n provisions. Making internatio­nal arbitratio­n harder and forcing U.S. investors to use Mexican courts will dissuade U.S. companies from pursuing cross-border investment opportunit­ies in Mexico that would create jobs and income in the United States. Weakening ISDS will hurt our economy and make U.S. automakers and energy companies, like those I represent in South and West Texas, less competitiv­e in Canada and Mexico.

There remain significan­t hurdles to bringing NAFTA into the future. The House has not voted on trade since 2015, when the Republican-controlled House and Senate passed legislatio­n giving President Obama Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) to negotiate new trade agreements. The House passed that bill with exactly 218 votes — 190 Republican­s and 28 Democrats. In the ongoing 116th Congress, only 22 of the Democrats and 101 of the Republican­s who voted for TPA are still in the House. Even if all 123 vote for the USMCA, the president will have to convince nearly one-third of the remaining members of the Democratic-controlled House to vote ‘Yes,’ which will be an exceptiona­lly tall order.

Additional­ly, the imposition of Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs on many U.S. allies complicate­s how members of Congress view the USMCA because Congress has few other opportunit­ies to weigh in on the president’s trade decisions. Last March, 107 House Republican­s sent a letter to President Trump saying that while China engages in unfair trade practices the use of tariffs is the wrong solution to the problem because “tariffs are taxes that make U.S. businesses less competitiv­e and U.S. consumers poorer.” While we must hold countries accountabl­e for their unfair trade practices, we should not disrupt the flow of fairly traded products that American manufactur­ers and consumers rely on every day.

Pulling out of NAFTA to force an affirmativ­e vote on USMCA would inject unnecessar­y uncertaint­y into our economy and be counterpro­ductive to efforts to approve the new agreement. With the USMCA lacking the votes needed for passage in the new Democratic-controlled House, the president and his negotiatin­g team need to address the concerns many in Congress have with the agreement and his trade policies. Working with Congress is a more viable path to success than trying to hold it hostage. Hurd, a Republican, represents Texas’ 23rd Congressio­nal District that runs from Bexar County west to the edge of El Paso.

 ?? Texas Central Partners ?? Texas Central plans to use Japanese-style Shinkansen bullet trains, which have been used in Japan for a half-century.
Texas Central Partners Texas Central plans to use Japanese-style Shinkansen bullet trains, which have been used in Japan for a half-century.

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