Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Farmers say tomato trade is ripe for change

- By Caitlin Dewey The Washington Post TOMATO, 4D

Tony DiMare, a third-generation Florida tomato grower, has spent two decades contending with cheap Mexican imports, watching his neighbors abandon crops in their fields and sell off their farms when they couldn’t match the price of incoming produce.

But emboldened by the Trump administra­tion’s hostility toward foreign trade, DiMare and a group of Southeast growers are pushing for tough new protection­ist measures against their Mexican rivals — so tough, in fact, that their demands threaten to wreck the negotiatio­ns.

“I’m all about free trade, but it has to be fair,” DiMare said. “It’s Americans first now, right?”

As the United States, Canada and Mexico prepare to wrap up a fourth round of talks about revisions to the North American Free Trade Agreement, there is growing fear that the talks could collapse around one of several “poison pill” provisions.

Those include the Florida tomato growers’ demands, which are supported by some berry, melon and pepper producers, for stronger anti-dumping measures — an idea that has been soundly rejected by the Mexicans.

The Florida growers’ highstakes campaign for special antidumpin­g measures for seasonal produce has also exposed sharp divisions with the rest of America’s farmers, who are generally strongly pro-NAFTA and whose

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