Orlando Sentinel

Mexico objects to part of trade deal

Days after bill’s signing, top trade negotiator takes issue with adding monitoring of labor conditions.

- By Mary Beth Sheridan

MEXICO CITY — A top Mexican trade negotiator flew to Washington for urgent talks Sunday as a hitch emerged in the U.S.Mexico-Canada Agreement, just days after it was signed.

Jesús Seade, undersecre­tary for North America in the Foreign Ministry, accused the United States of blindsidin­g Mexico by deciding to send up to five U.S. attaches to monitor labor conditions as part of the treaty.

That decision was included in implementi­ng legislatio­n sent to the U.S. Congress on Friday. The new treaty is intended to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Mexico’s labor practices were a major sticking point in the final rounds of negotiatio­ns on the accord. U.S. unions — and their allies in the Democratic Party — pushed for tough enforcemen­t of a new Mexican law that guarantees workers the right to elect their leaders and approve contracts. In the past, Mexican unions were often under the thumb of businesses and politician­s, who kept a lid on workers’ wages.

During the talks, Mexico rejected a U.S. proposal for foreign labor inspectors, saying it would violate the country’s sovereignt­y. Instead negotiator­s agreed to establish three-member panels — made up of Mexican, American and other experts — to resolve disputes.

Seade said he had sent a letter to Robert Lighthizer, the U.S. trade representa­tive, expressing “Mexico’s surprise and concern” about the language sent to Congress.

The decision to send labor attaches was “never mentioned to Mexico — never,” Seade told journalist­s on Saturday. “And, of course, we don’t agree.”

On Sunday, he was even more blunt. “We gained a lot in the trilateral talks, and because of this, the U.S. needs ‘extras’ that are NOT PART OF THE TREATY in order to sell it to its domestic audience,” Seade tweeted.

The U.S. trade representa­tive’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

But Lighthizer told CBS News’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday that the treaty “was more enforceabl­e and it’s better for American workers and American manufactur­ers and agricultur­e workers than it was before.”

Mexico’s Senate voted overwhelmi­ngly Thursday to approve the treaty, just two days after it was signed by the three nations’ negotiator­s in the Mexican capital. But the labor issue has since blossomed into a political controvers­y here. Critics have charged that Seade was careless or naive.

“It was a serious error for Seade to have gone alone to the final negotiatio­ns on USMCA,” José Antonio Crespo, a political scientist at the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics wrote on Twitter. “If he had been advised by Mexican personnel, he wouldn’t have been tricked or be pretending that he’d been tricked.”

Seade said Mexico would never accept foreign labor inspectors “for a simple reason: Mexican law doesn’t allow them.” The Foreign Ministry noted in a communiqué that Mexico could reject any such diplomats the United States sought to post in the country.

Mexico’s economy is heavily dependent on exports to its northern neighbor and foreign investment. For that reason, its leftist government has been strongly supportive of negotiatio­ns to create a successor to the 25-yearold NAFTA.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/AP ?? Mexican Undersecre­tary for North America Jesús Seade has taken issue with part of the the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement involving monitoring of labor conditions.
ADRIAN WYLD/AP Mexican Undersecre­tary for North America Jesús Seade has taken issue with part of the the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement involving monitoring of labor conditions.

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