The Guardian (Charlottetown)

U.S. NOT ‘DICTATORSH­IP’

Liberal MP says it’s time for Congress to commit on NAFTA

- BY MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

Time for Congress to commit on NAFTA: Liberal MP

Donald Trump needs to butt out as a hovering presence over the North American Free Trade Agreement talks and U.S. lawmakers must come clean about what they really think of the deal, says a veteran Liberal MP.

Bob Nault, who heads the House of Commons foreign affairs committee, will be taking his blunt assessment directly to Capitol Hill in the coming days.

Nault leads an all-party delegation of Canadian parliament­arians south of the border this week for meetings with their legislativ­e counterpar­ts - first to Mexico City and later in the week, Washington.

The visit comes amid the full court press already being mounted by the Trudeau government, which includes sending cabinet ministers to key U.S. states, and pushing the premiers to reach out to their top customers and American state counterpar­ts to save NAFTA.

The recently-ended fourth round of NAFTA has stoked major fears the 23-year-old trade deal could end with a U.S. withdrawal because American negotiator­s tabled potentiall­y deal-killing proposals on dairy, autos and other issues that Ottawa views as non-starters.

Nault says the time has come to start asking members of the U.S. Congress a very basic question.

“I’m going to Mexico and the United States to get one question answered that’s on everyone’s mind: do people want a NAFTA deal or not?” he said in an interview.

“The role that Congress plays is very, very important and if the government of the United States and its representa­tives is not interested in the deal they should probably tell us and not put forward pieces of work that they know we would never agree to at the negotiatin­g table.”

Nault also took aim at Trump directly for his anti-trade, tearup-NAFTA-rhetoric, which is an area where Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland have navigated carefully.

“The last time I looked, the U.S. is not a dictatorsh­ip, and neither is Canada or Mexico. So this isn’t about one individual, whether it is the president of the United States or the prime minister of Canada.”

Nault said the virtual presence that Trump has at the negotiatin­g tables - through social media even though he’s not physically in the room - is an unpreceden­ted phenomenon, at least in the three decades the Ontario Liberal MP has been in politics.

And, he added, that’s just not helpful.

“My recommenda­tion to him and his administra­tion is to let the negotiator­s do their job, and do it quickly with a very firm understand­ing of what the direction is,” said Nault.

“I don’t see any rationale for suggesting it’s a bad deal they’re going to rip it up, they’re going to give notice and those kinds of tactics. I don’t think it really works for anybody.”

The gap that has emerged between the U.S. positions and those of Mexico and Canada has now raised the stakes for elected politician­s in all three countries, he said.

Nault said the time has come for lawmakers in all three countries to “play their role signalling to their government­s that they support or don’t support NAFTA or renewed NAFTA.”

Nault’s tough talk is not part of a good-cop, bad-cop strategy by the Trudeau government. As the head of a parliament­ary committee, Nault said he and his fellow Conservati­ve and New Democrat members enjoy a degree of autonomy to speak on behalf of the people they were elected to represent.

He also dismissed any suggestion that a harder-edged approach in the U.S. could do more harm than good.

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 ?? EVAN VUCCI/THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP ?? President Donald Trump listens during a meeting with Governor Ricardo Rossello of Puerto Rico in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on Thursday, Oct. 19.
EVAN VUCCI/THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP President Donald Trump listens during a meeting with Governor Ricardo Rossello of Puerto Rico in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on Thursday, Oct. 19.

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