The Palm Beach Post

U.S. trade talks called ‘constructi­ve’; no plan unveiled

Canada’s leader cautions it will not be ‘pushed around.’

- By Jeanne Whalen and Jeff Stein Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Negotiatio­ns between the United States and some of its largest trading partners continued to yield positive rhetoric Thursday, though the details of any concrete change remained unclear.

In Washington, Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland emerged from talks with U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer to say she was “encouraged by the constructi­ve atmosphere” as the countries attempt to rework the North American Free Trade Agreement.

“Our officials did some work, they’ve prepared some issues for me and Ambassador Lighthizer to take some decisions, and we’re about to go in to continue negotiatin­g to do precisely that,” Freeland told reporters around midday.

And in Brussels, the European Union’s trade commission­er, Cecilia Malmstrom, said the bloc is willing to eliminate tariffs on imported cars if the U.S. does the same — something President Donald Trump has previously said he was open to.

The EU currently charges a 10 percent tariff on imported U.S. automobile­s, while the U.S. charges a 2.5 percent tariff on European cars and a 25 percent tariff on light-truck and SUV imports.

The conciliato­ry language marks a shift from earlier this summer, when the U.S. was slapping steep new tariffs on its trading partners and eliciting retaliator­y tariffs in response.

On Wednesday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau lifted hopes when he told reporters that it was possible the U.S., Canada and Mexico could reach a deal on reworking their freetrade agreement by today.

Trudeau cautioned that Canada was still prepared to walk away if the deal did not line up in the country’s best interest.

But the continued negotiatio­ns marked a change from the last several weeks, when Canadian officials were largely shut out of trade discussion­s because of Trump’s ongoing feud with Trudeau.

The acrimony boiled over at the G-7 meeting in June, when Trump called Trudeau “weak” and accused him of making “false statements.”

Trudeau replied that Canada wouldn’t be “pushed around” and described as “insulting” Trump’s insistence that there were national security concerns forcing him to slap tariffs on imported aluminum and steel.

The Trump administra­tion wants to send a letter to Congress by today that would formally begin a 90-day process for reworking NAFTA. The precise terms of an agreement would not have to be completed until late September under that process.

On Monday, Trump announced that he had reached a preliminar­y trade agreement with Mexico and threatened to use it as a replacemen­t for NAFTA, essentiall­y threatenin­g to remove Canada from the arrangemen­t. It’s unclear whether such a move would be permissibl­e under U.S. law, but Canada quickly rushed to the negotiatin­g table.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States