National Post

NAFTAtalks­pull weekendshi­ft

- Alexander Panetta

WASHINGTON • NAFTA negotiatin­g teams will keep bargaining through the weekend in a rush to get a deal by early May, fuelled by a Trump administra­tion desire to meet a legislativ­e deadline.

Those teams kept talking while their political masters left Washington on Friday, with plans to reconvene there early next week.

“You can call this a perpetual negotiatin­g round,” Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said. “We have had some very energetic and productive conversati­ons.”

She and her Mexican colleague are both rejecting the idea of deadline pressure, insisting there is no requiremen­t to get everything done by some specific date: “It will take as long as it takes to get a great win-win deal,” Freeland said.

But the Trump administra­tion has political reasons to hurry. There are just weeks left to meet the legislativ­e deadlines for ratifying a deal in the U.S. Congress this year.

The administra­tion is keen to have the agreement ratified under the current, friendlier, Republican-led Congress, as polls show a potential transfer in power after the November midterms.

The White House has been weighing different hardball tactics to force Congress to move quickly on ratificati­on and one involves a dramatic threat to cancel the existing NAFTA if lawmakers don’t approve the new one.

That carrot-and-stick tactic would be extremely highrisk, said Phil Levy, a former trade economist for George W. Bush.

It would see President Donald Trump invoke the six-month terminatio­n clause allowing a president to later pull out of NAFTA and let that risk hang over lawmakers as they deliberate over the new agreement.

It’s a strategy Trump has tried before on immigratio­n, so far without success — he cancelled an executive order granting clemency to young migrants and pressed Congress to restore that clemency in a more comprehens­ive immigratio­n law, which has not happened.

“The administra­tion does not appear to have thought through a viable conclusion for its NAFTA strategy,” Levy said Friday.

Another possibilit­y rumoured to be under discussion is Trump revising NAFTA by executive order. Other government­s have done it in the past — the agreement actually lets them tinker with several important details, namely automobile rules of origin.

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