Times Colonist

NAFTA talks becoming more positive

- ALEXANDER PANETTA and MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

MONTREAL — The single biggest question looming over the current round of NAFTA negotiatio­ns was whether the talks might survive the phase where countries started seriously engaging each other on the more bedevillin­g sticking points. Early signs point to: Yes. Glimmers of hope have emerged in a round viewed as a litmus test for whether these talks might move beyond an early stage marked by finger-pointing, standoffis­hness and threats of a U.S. withdrawal, and turn into real back-and-forth, give-and-take bargaining.

Several officials said the nearly completed weeklong round in Montreal has been more constructi­ve than gatherings of previous months, with countries diving into conversati­ons about auto rules, dispute resolution, and a five-year review clause.

Negotiator­s closed a chapter on anti-corruption. They also plan to meet at future rounds in Mexico City and Washington over the next two months. And there’s hope it won’t be quite so hostile this time when the three politician­s leading the process meet on Monday.

“We’re moving in a slightly more positive direction,” Canada’s chief negotiator, Steve Verheul, told the Canadian Press while walking between meetings Saturday.

“We’ll take that encouragem­ent where we can.”

That account was confirmed by several people — including sources from two national government­s, several lawmakers from Canada and the U.S. attending the talks, as well as industry stakeholde­rs being briefed.

Dave Reichert, the Republican chairman of a powerful U.S. congressio­nal trade committee, said after a breakfast meeting Saturday with Canadian and American officials: “I’m always optimistic. Even more so after the meeting this morning.”

His Democratic colleague Bill Pascrell agreed: “I’m more optimistic than I was six months ago. The attitude about tearing it all down — that’s changed, and we’ve become more positive.”

Everyone added notes of caution. The serious engagement has hardly begun; none of the hard topics have been completed; other irritants like dairy have barely been touched; and negotiator­s are waiting to hear what U.S. trade czar Robert Lighthizer says when he attends the talks Monday.

But at least they’re talking and listening — not insulting and threatenin­g.

That was not guaranteed entering this round, viewed as an important yardstick. There are barely eight weeks left before the current schedule of talks expires, and U.S. President Donald Trump faces a decision soon about whether to extend the talks, pause during national elections in the U.S. and Mexico or start the process of cancelling NAFTA.

“The U.S. side is listening,” said Neil Herrington, vice-president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

“One of the key outcomes we want to see from this round is that we start to have serious discussion­s on [serious] issues because we’ve gone almost three months now without really talking about them.”

Canada presented ideas for a new way to calculate where a car comes from, in sessions between Wednesday and Friday. Sources say the Canadians proposed formulas that would inflate the American content share — by counting not just traditiona­l pieces, but also the cost of research and intellectu­al property, where the U.S. dominates.

One talks insider said the countries are now taking that basic idea and working out various models, gauging their effect on the production of parts and on their own domestic industries.

Canada also suggested an overhaul of the investor-state dispute system under Chapter 11. The Canadian proposal would arguably strengthen the system for countries wishing to keep participat­ing, but allow the U.S. to leave if it wants.

The Trump administra­tion had previously demanded that Chapter 11 become voluntary for countries to participat­e in.

It views the investor-state system as an inducement for companies to outsource to Mexico, by providing additional legal security through a forum to sue for unfair treatment.

The Canadian suggestion: exclude American companies from the system, if the U.S. truly wants out.

All eyes turn to the politician­s Monday.

It will be the first group event in three months between the U.S. trade czar, his Canadian counterpar­t Chrystia Freeland, and Mexico’s Ildefonso Guajardo. One-onone meetings will be followed by a trilateral lunch and public statements.

The trio’s last meeting devolved into a spectacula­rly acrimoniou­s public event. Stakeholde­rs have feared another public jousting spectacle like that one, fretting that continued negativity might implode the talks and make Trump likelier to cancel NAFTA than continue the process beyond March.

But as this round winds down, people are more hopeful.

“Coming in I was a little bit worried — that this could be the end,” said Maryscott Greenwood of the Canadian American Business Council, who was attending the talks.

“Now hopefully this is the end of the beginning, not the beginning of the end.”

 ??  ?? U.S. President Donald Trump faces a decision soon about whether to extend the talks, pause during national elections in the U.S. and Mexico or start the process of cancelling NAFTA.
U.S. President Donald Trump faces a decision soon about whether to extend the talks, pause during national elections in the U.S. and Mexico or start the process of cancelling NAFTA.

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