The Oklahoman

US, Mexico agree on tentative trade deal

If finalized, pact would replace NAFTA

- BY PAUL WISEMAN, LUIS ALONSO LUGO AND ROB GILLIES

WASHINGTON — Snubbing Canada, the Trump administra­tion reached a preliminar­y deal Monday with Mexico to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement — a move that raised legal questions and threatened to disrupt the operations of companies that do business across the three-country trade bloc.

President Donald Trump suggested that he might leave Canada, America’s No. 2 trading partner, out of a new agreement. He said he wanted to call the revamped trade pact “the United States-Mexico Trade Agreement” because, in his view, NAFTA had earned a reputation as being harmful to American workers.

But first, he said, he would give Canada a chance to get back in — “if they’d like to negotiate fairly.” To intensify the pressure on Ottawa to agree to his terms, the president threatened to impose new taxes on Canadian auto imports.

Canada’s NAFTA negotiator, Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland, is cutting short a trip to Europe to fly to Washington on Tuesday to try to restart talks.

“We will only sign a new NAFTA that is good for Canada and good for

the middle class,” said Adam Austen, a spokesman for Freeland, adding that “Canada’s signature is required.”

“There is still a great deal of uncertaint­y — trepidatio­n, nervousnes­s — a feeling that we are on the outside looking in,” said Peter MacKay, a former Canadian minister of justice, defense and foreign affairs who is now a partner at the law firm Baker McKenzie.

Critics denounced the prospect of cutting Canada out of a North American trade pact, in part because of the risks it could pose for companies involved in internatio­nal trade. Many manufactur­ers have built complex but vital supply chains that cross all three NAFTA borders.

Trump was quick to proclaim victory, though, pointing to Monday’s surge in stock prices, which was fueled in part by the apparent breakthrou­gh with Mexico.

“We just signed a trade agreement with Mexico, and it’s a terrific agreement for everybody,” the president said. “It’s an agreement that a lot of people said couldn’t be done.”

Trump has frequently condemned the 24-yearold NAFTA trade pact as a job-killing “disaster” for American workers. NAFTA reduced most trade barriers between the three countries. But the president and other critics say it encouraged U.S. manufactur­ers to move south of the border to exploit low-wage Mexican labor.

The preliminar­y deal with Mexico might encourage more manufactur­ing in the United States. Yet it is far from final. Even after being formally signed, it would have be ratified by lawmakers in each country.

The U.S. Congress wouldn’t vote on it until next year — after November midterm elections that could end Republican control of the House of Representa­tives.

“There are still a lot of questions left to be answered,” MacKay said. He noted, for example, that Trump said nothing Monday about dropping U.S. tariffs on Mexican or Canadian steel — tariffs that were imposed, in part, to pressure those countries to reach an agreement on NAFTA.

But at least initially, it looks like at least a tentative public-relations victory for Trump, the week after his former campaign manager was convicted on financial crimes and his former personal attorney implicated him in hush money payments to two women who say they had affairs with Trump.

Before the administra­tion began negotiatin­g a new NAFTA a year ago, it notified Congress that it was beginning talks with Canada and Mexico. So Monday’s announceme­nt raises the question: Is it authorized to reach a deal with only one of those countries?

A senior administra­tion official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity, said yes: The administra­tion can tell Congress it had reached a deal with Mexico — and that Canada is welcome to join. But other analysts said the answer wasn’t clear: “It’s a question that has never been tested,” said Lori Wallach, director of the left-leaning Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch.

Even a key Trump ally, Rep. Kevin Brady, the Texas Republican who is chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, expressed caution about Monday’s apparent breakthrou­gh. Brady said he looked forward “to carefully analyzing the details and consulting in the weeks ahead to determine whether the new proposal meets the trade priorities set out by Congress.”

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? President Donald Trump talks on the phone with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday in Washington. Trump is announcing a trade “understand­ing” with Mexico that could lead to an overhaul of the North American Free Trade Agreement.
[AP PHOTO] President Donald Trump talks on the phone with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday in Washington. Trump is announcing a trade “understand­ing” with Mexico that could lead to an overhaul of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

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