USA TODAY US Edition

President, Dems agree on revised trade pact

Once the deal is ratified, it will replace NAFTA

- Michael Collins and David Jackson

WASHINGTON – House Democrats and President Donald Trump have reached a deal to revise a trade pact with Mexico and Canada, Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced Tuesday.

The deal, announced more than a year ago after months of negotiatio­ns, will replace the North American Free Trade Agreement, a nearly quartercen­tury-old accord that essentiall­y eliminated tariffs on most goods traded among the three countries.

The new agreement includes rules for the movement of products among the three countries. Among the provisions are a requiremen­t that a higher percentage of autos be made from parts manufactur­ed in North America.

The Trump administra­tion has been pushing Congress to ratify the trade agreement before Dec. 31.

Pelosi did not say when the House would vote but suggested it could be before the end of the year.

WASHINGTON – House Democrats and President Donald Trump struck an agreement to revise a new trade deal with Mexico and Canada, delivering a win for the president on a top legislativ­e priority.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. announced the agreement at a news conference Tuesday morning, calling the revised trade pact “a victory for America’s workers.” She did not say when the House would vote on the agreement but suggested it could happen before the end of the year.

Pelosi and other Democrats said the agreement includes stronger provisions on labor, enforcemen­t and pharmaceut­icals that they sought as conditions for putting the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA, to a vote in Congress.

Pelosi described the deal as “infinitely better” than the agreement the Trump administra­tion proposed to Congress.

The Trump administra­tion has been pushing Congress to ratify the trade agreement before the end of the year. The revisions could clear the way for congressio­nal approval of the deal even as House Democrats prepare impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Trump.

Shortly before Pelosi’s news conference, Trump took to Twitter and said the deal had “very good Democrat support.”

“That would be great for our Country!” he wrote.

The trade agreement, announced 15 months ago after months of negotiatio­ns, will replace the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, a nearly quarter-century-old accord that essentiall­y eliminated tariffs on most goods traded among the three countries.

Trump blamed NAFTA for the loss of American jobs and frequently slammed it as the “worst trade deal ever” during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign. After taking office, his administra­tion opened talks with Mexico and Canada to rewrite the agreement.

The new trade pact includes rules for the movement of products among the three countries. Among the provisions are a requiremen­t that a higher percentage of autos be made from parts manufactur­ed in North America.

Under NAFTA, automakers qualify for zero tariffs if 62.5% of their vehicles’ components are manufactur­ed in the USA, Canada or Mexico. That figure would jump to 75% under the new deal. Starting in 2020, 30% of vehicle production would have to be done by workers earning an average production wage of at least $16 per hour. By 2023, that percentage would rise to 40%.

The agreement would run for 16 years but would be reviewed after six years and could be extended for another 16.

Trump and the leaders of Mexico and Canada signed the deal late last year, but Congress has yet to approve the agreement. Trump blamed Pelosi for the delay, accusing her of holding it up under orders from labor unions.

The trade agreement included some policies embraced by Democrats, including stronger labor standards and environmen­tal provisions. Labor groups complained that those provisions didn’t go far enough and that the agreement did not include sufficient mechanisms to enforce the requiremen­ts.

When Democrats gained the House majority in January, Pelosi and other Democratic leaders began negotiatio­ns with the Trump administra­tion to revise the trade pact to address those concerns.

Among the changes that Democrats added to the agreement are a series of enforcemen­t and accountabi­lity provisions, including the establishm­ent of attachés in Mexico City to regularly monitor environmen­tal laws, regulation­s and practices.

Democrats struck a pharmaceut­ical provision that they argued had been a gift to makers of expensive brandname drugs.

U.S. law provides pharmaceut­ical companies with 12 years of market protection for their drugs, which means no generic copies of their medicines can be introduced during that period. Canada grants drugmakers eight years of market protection, and Mexico provides five.

The trade proposal offered by the Trump administra­tion would have provided drugmakers with a minimum of 10 years of market exclusivit­y, which would have extended the time that residents of those countries would wait before generic copies of their drugs were available. Critics said that would drive up the cost of medicine for consumers.

Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., who was involved in the trade talks, said that provision was eliminated. “It is gone,” she said.

Richard Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, endorsed the revised trade agreement. Though the deal is “far from perfect,” he said, “there is no denying that the trade rules in America will now be fairer because of our hard work and perseveran­ce.”

President Donald Trump on Twitter and said the deal had “very good Democrat support ... That would be great for our Country!”

 ?? AP ?? A delegation including Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador center, and U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer celebrates.
AP A delegation including Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador center, and U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer celebrates.

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