The Palm Beach Post

NAFTA ministers to meet again amid intensifie­d push for deal

- By Eric Martin

Senior trade officials from

the U.S., Canada and Mexico will meet again in Washington in an intensifie­d push to reach a NAFTA agreement in the next few weeks.

Talks will pick up today, after Cabinet-level members vowed on Friday to keep up the momentum following consultati­ons with their technical teams over the weekend. Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo said last week that after seven months of discussion­s, the three sides have entered a concentrat­ed phase where “my negotiatin­g team is practicall­y living in Washington.” Still, major difference­s remain over key U.S. demands.

Mexico scored a separate commercial victory over the weekend with a deal in principle to update a 17-year-old free-trade agreement with the European Union. Guajardo jetted to Brussels to

help close the deal. Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s minister for foreign affairs, said Friday that North American Free Trade Agreement negotiator­s have been making good progress on updated rules for cars, which she said will be at the heart of any eventual updated NAFTA.

“We have had some very energetic and productive conversati­ons,” Freeland told reporters on the steps of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive’s offiffice following meetings with her counterpar­ts. “We are certainly in a more intense period of negotiatio­ns, and we are making good progress.”

President Donald Trump on Monday said again that he could make Mexican-immigratio­n curbs a condition of a new NAFTA deal, highlighti­ng that a deal is still far from certain. Trump in a Twitter post said Mexico “must stop people from going through Mexico and into the U.S.,” adding “We may make this a condition of the new NAFTA Agreement. Our Country cannot accept what is happening!”

Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray responded it’s unacceptab­le to demand that Mexico tie changes to its “sovereign” immigratio­n policy to an updated trade pact.

“Mexico decides its immigratio­n policy in a sovereign manner, and the migration cooperatio­n with the U.S. takes place in such a way that Mexico agrees,” Videgaray said on Twitter.

This week’s talks are set to be the broadest and biggest since the fifinal offifficia­l negotiatin­g round in Mexico City in early March, according to a preliminar­y agenda obtained by Bloomberg. Topics include automotive rules, agricultur­e, and legal and institutio­nal matters such as dispute settlement mechanisms.

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto traveled to Germany over the weekend to meet with Chancellor Angela Merkel at the Hannover Messe, a huge industry show where Mexico is the chosen partner country this year. Deepening ties with the EU is part of Mexico’s push to diversify beyond the U.S., the destinatio­n for 72 percent of the nation’s $435 billion in exports last year. Pena Nieto said he’s optimistic he’ll have good news to announce from the NAFTA talks.

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