Lethbridge Herald

NAFTA deal ‘not close at all’: union leader

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — WASHINGTON

Talk of an impending NAFTA deal is premature, Canadian union leader Jerry Dias said in Washington while officials were negotiatin­g there Wednesday.

The Unifor boss said he’s been in contact with the Canadian negotiatin­g team and said speculatio­n from some about an imminent agreement in principle is divorced from reality.

The United States has been increasing­ly anxious to get something announced this month, before it becomes impossible for the rest of this year because of elections in Mexico and the U.S. Congress.

“They’re not close to a deal at all,” Dias said in an interview.

“There’s way too many tables that have yet to be closed... The main issues around auto, labour standards, (disputeres­olution rules under) Chapter 11 — those issues haven’t been resolved yet at all.”

The sides are meeting constantly in an effort to reach some sort of deal this spring.

In addition to the current sessions in Washington, the ministers leading the talks will be in Peru at the Summit of the Americas this week. Chrystia Freeland, Robert Lighthizer and Ildefonso Guajardo will likely hold separate bilateral sessions, possibly capped with a trilateral meeting.

Mexico’s minister has expressed optimism about an agreement this month, pegging chances of that at 80 per cent.

But the idea of an agreement in principle being announced at the Peru summit, as some had hoped, will not pan out. U.S. President Donald Trump is not even attending anymore, as he weighs a possible military strike in Syria.

Dias said the notion of a deal this week was a pipe dream from the start.

Sources confirm Dias’s view that several major issues are far from being settled — with irritants like dairy remaining unresolved, while autos have been the main focus of talks.

Other observers say a more realistic short-term possibilit­y is something that falls short of a formal agreement.

Trade lawyer Dan Ujczo describes this scenario as an “agreement in passing” — an interim document that’s more detailed than a press release, less detailed than something parliament­s can ratify.

Dias questions the point of such an interim agreement.

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