Ottawa Citizen

As Trump boils, NAFTA simmers

- ANDREW MAYEDA AND BILLY HOUSE

On the day his administra­tion began the formal process of renegotiat­ing the North American Free Trade Agreement, U.S. President Donald Trump was at the White House, lamenting the fact he has been made the subject of a “witch hunt.”

While Trump said Thursday he respects the move to appoint former FBI director Robert Mueller as special counsel to investigat­e Russian interfence in the U.S. election, the president reiterated that he had been targeted.

“This is the single greatest witch hunt of a politician in American history!” the president had tweeted earlier.

At the White House news conference, he said, “Believe me, there is no collusion” referencin­g his presidenti­al campaign and Russia.

On the NAFTA front, U.S. trade representa­tive Robert Lighthizer gave notice to Congress of the government’s intention to renegotiat­e the 23-year-old accord with Canada and Mexico.

Reworking the trade deal was a central promise of Trump’s election campaign, during which he called NAFTA a “disaster.”

In the next 90 days, Lighthizer will consult with lawmakers on the position the U.S. will take in negotiatio­ns, which could begin as early as Augist.

The Trump administra­tion took its first formal step toward renegotiat­ing the North American Free Trade Agreement, setting the stage for talks that could influence more than $1.2 trillion in annual trade and shake up corporate supply chains.

U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer gave official notice to Congress on Thursday of the government’s intention to renegotiat­e the 23-year-old accord with Canada and Mexico. Lighthizer was required to do so under a law that enables the president to fasttrack trade legislatio­n through Congress.

Over the next 90 days, Lighthizer will consult with lawmakers on the position the U.S. will take in negotiatio­ns, which could begin as early as Aug. 16. The U.S. administra­tion hopes to wrap up negotiatio­ns this year before a final deal is presented to Congress for approval.

“The president’s leadership on trade will permanentl­y reverse the dangerous trajectory of American trade,” Lighthizer said Thursday. “While our economy and businesses have changed considerab­ly, NAFTA has not. Most chapters are clearly outdated and do not reflect the most recent standards in U.S. trade agreements.”

Reworking the trade deal was a central promise of Trump’s election campaign, during which he called NAFTA a “disaster” and blamed it for costing millions of U.S. jobs and hollowing out the manufactur­ing sector. The administra­tion has made reducing the trade deficit a priority, and Lighthizer suggested Thursday the U.S. will seek to lure back firms that have moved production to Mexico. The U.S. had a $62-billion trade deficit with Mexico last year.

“Sectors like manufactur­ing, particular­ly with regard to Mexico, have fallen behind,” Lighthizer said. “When we lose manufactur­ing facilities, we lose the thousands of good-paying jobs associated with those facilities, directly impacting middle-class Americans.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland welcomed what was a widely anticipate­d developmen­t,

The president’s leadership on trade will permanentl­y reverse the dangerous trajectory of American trade. ROBERT LIGHTHIZER, United States Trade Representa­tive NAFTA’s track record is one of economic growth and middle-class job creation, both here in Canada and throughout North America. CHRYSTIA FREELAND, Minister of Foreign Affairs

promising to consult with Canadians on the best way forward. She reiterated the government’s key message on NAFTA — that it is in fact a good deal for all parties, including the U.S., where nine million American jobs are dependent on it.

“NAFTA’s track record is one of economic growth and middle-class job creation, both here in Canada and throughout North America,” Freeland said in a statement. “We will continue to consult closely with the provinces and territorie­s, industry, unions, civil society, think tanks, academics, indigenous peoples, women, youth and the general public.”

Her Mexican counterpar­t Luis Videgaray said the three countries can reshape NAFTA “under a winwin framework.”

Lighthizer noted that NAFTA has been “relatively successful” for certain sectors of the U.S. economy, such as agricultur­e, investment services and energy. However, he added that the agreement doesn’t do enough to address digital commerce and intellectu­al property, and that labour and environmen­tal matters are treated as an “afterthoug­ht.”

The U.S. hopes to retain the existing three-way structure of the deal, Lighthizer said. “There is value in making the transition to a modernized NAFTA as seamless as possible,” he said. “We’re going to give renegotiat­ion a good strong shot.”

Lighthizer said the administra­tion will consider other options if trilateral talks fail. After threatenin­g to withdraw from the agreement last month, Trump reconsider­ed in favour of a renegotiat­ion but said he’ll terminate America’s involvemen­t if talks don’t go his way.

Under its fast-track authority, the White House has to give Congress 90 days’ notice before it formally starts renegotiat­ing a trade deal.

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