Los Angeles Times

U.S.-Mexico talks yield preliminar­y NAFTA deal

Significan­t hurdles remain with Canada, whose trade team is due in Washington as signing deadline nears.

- By Don Lee, Kate Linthicum and Patrick J. McDonnell

WASHINGTON — President Trump is within reach of notching his first significan­t win on trade, announcing Monday that his administra­tion has agreed with Mexico on a revamped North American Free Trade Agreement. But a major obstacle stands in the way.

Canada, the third party in Trump’s bid to overhaul the far-reaching, 24-year-old pact, has not been at the bargaining table in recent weeks. And while Canadian officials are expected to rejoin the negotiatio­ns Tuesday in Washington, the United States and Canada have significan­t issues still to resolve.

On Monday, Trump ratcheted up the pressure on Canada by essentiall­y issuing an ultimatum: If Ottawa doesn’t accede to his demands — Trump mentioned Canada’s protected dairy market in particular — the president said he would go ahead and seal a bilateral agreement with Mexico, excluding Canada.

For extra measure, the president added that if Canada didn’t play ball with him, he would hit the country with taxes on auto imports. “It will either be a tariff on cars, or it will be a negotiated deal,” Trump said. “And frankly, a tariff on cars is a much easier way to go. But perhaps the other would be much better for Canada.”

It wasn’t entirely clear that Mexico would agree to a new trade deal solely with the United States. And the prospect of a U.S.-Mexico trade pact without Canada is fraught with legal, political and economic risks, and uncertaint­ies for all three countries.

In Ottawa, Canadian officials sought to put their best face on the situation. Adam Austen, a spokesman for Canada’s minister of foreign affairs, Chrystia Freeland, said in a statement: “Given the encouragin­g announceme­nt today of further bilateral progress between the U.S. and Mexico, Minister Freeland will travel to Washington, D.C., tomorrow to continue negotiatio­ns.” But

he added: “We will only sign a new NAFTA that is good for Canada and good for the middle class. Canada’s signature is required.”

U.S.-Canada relations have been strained since Trump refused to exempt Canada, one of the United States’ oldest and closest allies, from hefty tariffs on steel and aluminum. Trump levied the duties on the grounds that those imports threatened U.S. national security, which Canada considered an affront.

The pressure on Canada is all the more intense because the Trump administra­tion and Mexico want to notify Congress of a threeway deal by the end of this week to satisfy a 90-day procedural requiremen­t that would allow for Mexico’s parliament to ratify a revamped NAFTA before its new president takes office Dec. 1.

Given that tight time frame and the extent of the outstandin­g issues, it will be “very, very difficult” to come to an understand­ing in a few days, said Eric Miller, a former Canadian government official and committee member advising Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s administra­tion on trade.

“I don’t see how the Trudeau government just bends over to the will of the Trump administra­tion and survives politicall­y,” said Miller, who is president of Rideau Potomac Strategy Group. “They may be willing to call Trump’s bluff when he says, ‘Take it or leave it.’ ”

Canada and Mexico began renegotiat­ing NAFTA last August at the behest of Trump, who throughout his 2016 presidenti­al campaign blasted the pact as a disaster for American manufactur­ing and jobs.

Trump’s top trade official, U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, on Monday called the agreement with Mexico “absolutely terrific.”

In a conference call with reporters, he said, “I think it is fair to say we’ll do a rebalancin­g. I think it’s going to lead to more jobs for American workers and farmers, but also more jobs for workers and farmers from Mexico.”

One of the most significan­t changes in the deal would raise the percentage of a car’s content that must be produced in North America — to 75% from 62.5% — and adopt a new rule that would link auto production to wages. The aim of the new auto rules is to boost investment and production in North America and especially the United States. But without disclosure of the details, Rep. Sandy Levin (D-Mich.) said, “We don’t know how it would work out and whether it would have an impact on jobs or wages in the U.S.”

The U.S. initially wanted an automatic expiration of NAFTA after five years unless all three wanted to renew. Canada and Mexico opposed, saying it would create uncertaint­y and hamper investment­s. The U.S.-Mexico deal specifies a 16-year term for the agreement with a review every six years that could trigger renegotiat­ions.

Lighthizer said he hoped that Canada would join in now, but a senior administra­tion official on the call said that “if Canada is not in, then we’ll notify that we have an agreement with Mexico and that we’re open to Canada joining it.”

Many lawmakers and business groups are demanding all three nations remain in the pact. “It is imperative that a trilateral agreement be inked,” said Jay Timmons, president of the National Assn. of Manufactur­ers, noting the integratio­n and the massive amounts of goods moving between the three nations.

The preliminar­y agreement with Mexico was struck after several weeks of talks and a marathon session over the weekend in Washington.

Trump announced the deal in the White House. In front of reporters, he called Mexico’s outgoing president, Enrique Peña Nieto, to congratula­te him on the agreement. Trump, putting Peña Nieto on a speaker phone in the Oval Office, said the deal “makes it a much more fair bill.” He suggested renaming NAFTA as the U.S.-Mexico Trade Agreement, notably excluding Canada.

Though Trump characteri­zed the accord as a bilateral deal that will proceed with or without Canada, Peña Nieto said repeatedly he hoped and expected Canada would come on board. Peña Nieto said on Twitter that he had spoken with Trudeau and had “expressed the importance of [Canada] re-joining the process, with the goal of concluding a trilateral negotiatio­n this week.”

Luis Videgaray, Mexico’s foreign minister, said at a news conference at the Mexican Embassy in Washington that although Mexico wants Canada incorporat­ed into the talks, the terms of the U.S.-Mexico agreement would stand if for some reason Canada and the U.S. can’t come to terms.

At the same time, he said: “We want a trilateral agreement, we want Canada to be part of this agreement. We will put all our effort 24/7 for Canada to be part of the agreement.” Videgaray said that if Canada has not joined by Friday, it still would be allowed to do so later, suggesting that there may be some wiggle room in meeting the procedural requiremen­ts before the Dec. 1 signing deadline.

Experts said Mexico might be reluctant to move ahead without Canada. “There definitely seems to be a little bit of a gap in terms of how the two countries are talking about this,” said Christophe­r Wilson, an economist at the Washington-based Wilson Center think tank.

Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, said the preliminar­y agreement is more a victory for Trump because it allows him to declare a win on trade ahead of the November midterm elections. “It gives Trump the headlines he wants,” Hufbauer said.

The United States still has significan­t unresolved issues with Canada, including Trump’s insistence that Canada open up its dairy market. Complainin­g about Canada’s big tariffs on dairy imports, Trump said, “We’re not going to stand for that.”

Canadian officials, however, have pointed to similarly strong U.S. protection­s for its sugar market. Overall, the U.S. had a trade surplus with Canada in 2017, including goods and services. With Mexico, the U.S. posted a trade deficit of $64 billion last year.

“It will be difficult, but not impossible, to clear all of these hurdles in a week’s time,” said Daniel Ujczo, a trade lawyer at Dickinson Wright who has been closely monitoring the talks. “It is likely that the three NAFTA parties will reach a ‘handshake’ this week that will start the 90-day procedural countdown required before signing the deal.”

 ?? Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images ?? ILDEFONSO GUAJARDO VILLARREAL, left, Mexico’s economic minister, greets President Trump at the White House as he arrives to speak about trade.
Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images ILDEFONSO GUAJARDO VILLARREAL, left, Mexico’s economic minister, greets President Trump at the White House as he arrives to speak about trade.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States