Times Colonist

NAFTA remake to launch in 2 weeks

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

WASHINGTON — The U.S. government intends to take the first formal step in renegotiat­ing NAFTA within the next couple of weeks, setting the stage for actual negotiatio­ns with Canada and Mexico later this year.

The Trump administra­tion hopes to officially advise Congress within two weeks of its intention to renegotiat­e the quarter-century-old agreement, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said Friday. That would begin a minimum 90-day consultati­on phase. The administra­tion would then spend a few months collecting input on what positions it should bring to the negotiatin­g table, gathering that advice from lawmakers and industry advisory committees before real negotiatio­ns start in the summer.

It could take longer than 90 days: American lawmakers have a daunting to-do list that includes more pressing priorities, such as health reform and the first major change to U.S. corporate taxes since the 1980s.

U.S. law gives them a say on NAFTA, too. If the administra­tion wants lawmakers to agree to a simple yes-or-no vote on a trade deal, it must consult with Congress throughout the process — before, during, and after negotiatio­ns.

”There’s a very specific set of processes that is required to get through the so-called fast track,” Ross said Friday, during a news conference with Mexico’s Minister of Economy Ildefonso Guajardo Villarreal. “The next stage will be — hopefully sometime in the next couple of weeks — issuing the 90-day consultati­on letter. That’s what triggers the beginnings of the formal process itself. We don’t have a date certain for that. We’ve been in discussion with the key committees — Senate finance committee and the House waysand-means committee.”

But the process could be slowed down by a congressio­nal logjam. The Senate and House committees that would be involved in consultati­ons are tied up with controvers­ial health and tax reforms. It’s not just the finance and ways-and-means committees that need to get involved.

So do the agricultur­e committees in both chambers, according to the latest version of U.S. fasttrack law, which includes nearly six dozen references to consultati­ons that need to be performed.

There are already major battles on Capitol Hill — between the parties, and also within them.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau referred to one such feud when asked Friday about a proposal for a border tax — an idea being hotly debated between the two parties, inside the parties, and within the White House itself.

The Canadian government has warned it could retaliate if such a tariff-like border tax were introduced. Trudeau, speaking in Texas at an energy conference, referred Friday to unintended consequenc­es.

But he pointed out that it’s still far from a done deal.

”I think we’re a long way from it being adopted. And as I’ve said, we still don’t know exactly what form it will take — whether it will be different for Canada, or for elsewhere. So I’m not going to get into it,” Trudeau said.

”[But] we think the border adjustment tax would be bad — not just for Canada, but for the United States as well.”

There’s also a feud on Capitol Hill involving trade.

The U.S. Trade Representa­tive’s office is understaff­ed and doesn’t even have a cabinet member confirmed yet. That’s because there’s a fight over whether Trump’s choice, Robert Lighthizer, needs a special waiver from lawmakers to serve in cabinet after he worked as a lawyer for foreign government­s.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI, ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.
EVAN VUCCI, ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

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