The Columbus Dispatch

Hundreds of business leaders ask Trump to stick with trade deal

- By Franco Ordonez

WASHINGTON — Hundreds of business leaders from all 50 states have joined forces to increase pressure on President Donald Trump to remain in NAFTA.

In a letter signed by more than 310 state and local chambers of commerce, the business leaders urged Trump to update and improve, but not end, the 23-yearold trilateral agreement with Mexico and Canada that, the leaders say, has contribute­d to $1.2 trillion annually in trade.

“We recognize that this agreement is a quarter century old. It makes sense to modernize it,” said Glenn Hamer, president and CEO of the Arizona Chamber of Commerce. “But for the love of God don’t do any harm to something that has been so economical­ly beneficial to states all across America.”

As negotiator­s from the United States, Canada and Mexico prepare to kick off a fourth round of talks on Wednesday in Washington, D.C., a feud broke out last week between Trump and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce as the size of the stakes came into sharp focus.

It’s a crucial round in the negotiatio­ns as each country’s trade representa­tives are expected to introduce specific proposals on controvers­ial items, including rules of origin thresholds that would require products treated favorably under the pact to include higher levels of U.S.-produced content and a sunset clause that would automatica­lly terminate the agreement after five years unless all three member countries agreed to extend it.

John Murphy, the chamber’s senior vice president for internatio­nal policy, warned that the administra­tion’s demands are “highly dangerous” and could ultimately end the deal. The Trump administra­tion responded by accusing the chamber of being part of the entrenched Washington elite fighting his work to “drain the swamp.”

“The president has been clear that NAFTA has been a disaster for many Americans, and achieving his objectives requires substantia­l change,” Emily Davis, spokeswoma­n for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive, said in response. “These changes of course will be opposed by entrenched Washington lobbyists and trade associatio­ns.”

Canada and Mexico are two of the top three trading partners with the United States and they are America’s two largest export markets. Indeed, the United States exported more than twice as much to Canada and Mexico individual­ly as it did to China in 2016, according to U.S. government data.

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