Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NAFTA rewrite planned

U.S. trade official notifies Congress

- PAUL WISEMAN

WASHINGTON — Making good on a campaign promise, the Trump administra­tion formally told Congress on Thursday that it intends to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico.

U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer sent a letter to congressio­nal leaders, starting 90 days of consultati­ons with lawmakers over how to revamp the pact. Talks with Canada and Mexico can begin after that.

The two-page letter offered few details about what changes the administra­tion would seek in the 23-year-old pact that President Donald Trump has called “a disaster.” Lighthizer told reporters that any new deal should do a better job of protecting U.S. factory workers and should be updated to reflect new technologi­es.

Last month, White House aides spread word that Trump was ready to pull out of NAFTA. Within hours, the president reversed course and said he would seek a better deal first.

“We are going to give renegotiat­ion a good, strong shot,” Lighthizer said. He

refused to say whether leaving NAFTA remained an option.

The trade agreement has been a lightning rod for criticism since it was being negotiated in the early 1990s. During the 1992 presidenti­al campaign, independen­t candidate Ross Perot famously predicted a “giant sucking sound” as NAFTA pulled U.S. factory jobs south of the border into Mexico. Campaignin­g last year, Trump vowed to renegotiat­e NAFTA and pull out of it he couldn’t get a better deal.

NAFTA took effect in 1994 and triggered a big increase in trade among the three countries. American farmers have mostly benefited from the reduction in trade barriers. But the pact did encourage American manufactur­ers to relocate some operations to Mexico to take advantage of cheaper labor there, prompting critics to blame NAFTA for wiping out U.S. factory jobs.

“Since the signing of NAFTA, we have seen our

manufactur­ing industry decimated, factories shuttered, and countless workers left jobless,” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a statement. “President Trump is going to change that.”

In March, the administra­tion circulated an eight-page draft letter on NAFTA that disappoint­ed critics by appearing to keep much of the existing trade agreement in place.

Thursday’s letter had fewer specifics. Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch, called it “markedly vague.” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, complained that “the president’s vague NAFTA letter is a stark contrast with the aggressive promises he made to hardworkin­g families during the campaign.”

But Republican congressio­nal leaders promised to work with the administra­tion to craft a better deal.

“We look forward to working with the administra­tion to strengthen the agreement in a seamless way and ensure that we retain the current benefits for American workers, farmers and businesses,” said Texas Republican Rep. Kevin Brady, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Mexico and Canada signaled that they welcomed the opportunit­y to modernize the agreement.

Gary Hufbauer, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute, said the United States could seek modest “technocrat­ic” changes, including provisions to update NAFTA to reflect technologi­es that have emerged since the original agreement was negotiated. Or it could take a more aggressive approach, putting pressure on Mexico to reduce the trade gap, perhaps by dropping a value-added tax Mexico slaps on goods crossing the border.

Thomas Donohue, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, urged the administra­tion to reach a deal quickly. Political pressures in 2018 — a presidenti­al election in Mexico and congressio­nal elections in the United States — could make it harder to seal an agreement next year.

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