Marysville Appeal-Democrat

NAFTA is history as Senate gives final approval to USMCA

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

WASHINGTON – Congress gave final approval to the new North American trade accord Thursday, with the Republican-controlled Senate moving swiftly during President Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t proceeding­s to hand him one of his biggest wins since occupying the White House.

There was never any doubt that the Senate would pass the United States-mexico-canada Agreement after the House overwhelmi­ngly approved it last month in rare bipartisan fashion.

The only question was by how much, and when it would reach the Senate floor. In the last few days Republican leaders pushed the legislatio­n quickly through several committees, started debate Wednesday by unanimous consent and scheduled a roll call for Thursday morning before members of the Senate are sworn in as jurors for Trump’s impeachmen­t trial.

The vote was 89 to 10, with one Republican and eight Democrats plus Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-vermont, who is running for president – voting no.

“There was a lot of momentum to get USMCA done and behind the administra­tion before things could get really bogged down with impeachmen­t and frankly the campaign season,” said Daniel Ujczo, a trade lawyer at Dickinson Wright who has been closely tracking the trade measure.

Final Senate action on the USMCA, which replaces the North American Free Trade Agreement, came just a day after Trump signed a partial trade deal with China. The deals fulfill two of Trump’s major campaign pledges, although the final agreements achieve far less than Trump promised.

However, the two agreements have significan­tly eased trade tensions that had darkened the economy over the last two years. Trump slapped multiple tariffs on China during an 18-month trade war, and repeatedly threatened to withdraw from NAFTA if Canada and Mexico did not make concession­s.

Trump had long slammed NAFTA as a “disaster” for American industry and workers. In that way he shared the disdain that many Democrats and labor groups have of NAFTA and free-trade pacts generally, viewing them as a job killers. As a candidate, Trump

Washington DC, District of Columbia.

promised to do away with the quarter-century-old pact or rewrite it.

Canada and Mexico are the United States’ top trading partners, with threeway trade in goods reaching about $1.3 trillion.

The three countries began renegotiat­ing NAFTA in the summer of 2017, and the parties concluded talks in September 2018.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democratic leaders, however, would not allow the trade bill to move forward until the administra­tion agreed to strengthen labor enforcemen­t and make several other changes

to the original deal. The House approved the accord 385 to 41 on Dec. 19, the last legislativ­e working day of the year.

While the final Senate vote was almost a formality, individual lawmakers still had plenty to say.

Speaking in the Senate chamber, Sen. Charles E. Grassley, the Iowa Republican who chairs the Finance Committee, talked at length about the benefits of USMCA and said it was a shame that it took so long for ratificati­on, which he blamed on “partisan roadblocks.”

California’s two Democratic senators, Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris, went separate ways on the trade bill.

Feinstein, who voted against NAFTA in 1993, said in a statement that she was in favor of USMCA, calling it an improvemen­t over NAFTA and one that would be good for the nation and California. Feinstein cited as an example the $300 million allotted to clean up pollution from the Tijuana River.

Harris, however, said it was precisely because of shortcomin­gs in the environmen­t chapter that she could not vote for USMCA. The accord doesn’t address climate change, she said, and as such “fails to meet the crises of this moment.”

USMCA drew opposition from leading environmen­tal advocacy groups such as the Sierra Club and the National Resources Defense Council. Senate Democratic Leader Charles Schumer said he would vote against the bill “because it does not address climate change, the greatest threat facing our planet.”

Business and labor union groups were mostly supportive of the agreement, although they were hardly effusive about it.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce expressed disappoint­ment that the administra­tion, under Democratic pressure, stripped out a provision that would have given 10 years of exclusive market protection­s for certain drugs. The chamber argued that USMCA should not be a model for future trade deals, although that is exactly what U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said USMCA would be.

Still, the chamber and other groups like it saw USMCA as better than the possible alternativ­e of losing NAFTA, which would have caused major disruption­s in supply chains and tariff-free trade in North America.

Estimates of USMCA’S economic impact vary, but on the whole most don’t see it as having a major effect on the American economy. NAFTA already had done away with most tariffs in North American trade.

NAFTA had 22 chapters. The USMCA contains 34 chapters, 13 annexes and 16 side letters. They include new rules and standards on digital trade, state-owned enterprise­s and currency matters.

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