Midterms clear up little on tariffs, USMCA
WASHINGTON If the midterm elections were supposed to wipe clear the uncertainty of tariffs, trade and other smudges on the window into Canada-U.S. affairs, well, have a look at the bizarro world of politics in the United States of America.
A Democratic majority in the House of Representatives was “very close to complete victory” for President Donald Trump. The election is both over and not over, thanks to votecounting disputes in Florida, Georgia and Arizona. There’s a new trade deal, but the White House and Canada are still staring each other down over steel and aluminum.
So good luck getting odds on when, or if, the new Congress will ratify the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.
“We don’t know yet,” Ohio trade lawyer Dan Ujczo said of how new House members are likely to vote when Capitol Hill takes up USMCA, something that he fears could now be a year or more away.
Many definite Yes voters went down to defeat in the midterms, he said, including Texas congressional members John Culberson and Pete Sessions, Minnesota’s Erik Paulsen and Iowa’s David Young, among others — introducing yet another element of uncertainty into a political dynamic that seems these days to know little else.
Uncertain doesn’t mean No, said Ujczo, a partner with U.S. trade and customs firm Dickinson Wright.
“They’re freshmen — are they going to get pulled in the direction of their caucus, or do they reflect the views of their voters?” he said. “There’s going to be a lot of pressure on them to vote Yes, but it takes time — and it may be time that we don’t have.”
While the hard-won agreement that emerged at the 11th hour six weeks ago after a 13-month marathon of difficult talks awaits a vote, the terms of the nearly 25-year-old deal it was meant to replace will remain in effect, federal officials in Ottawa say.
Powerful Republicans who oppose tariffs, such as Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, are still around and wielding their influence, they note. So are prominent Democrats who prefer the new deal to the old one, like Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown.