San Francisco Chronicle

Trump, Trudeau meet amid dispute

- By Ken Thomas Ken Thomas is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — President Trump remained noncommitt­al about the future of the North American Free Trade Agreement on Wednesday as he welcomed Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to the White House amid simmering disputes over trade between the two North American neighbors.

Trudeau joined Trump in the Oval Office at the start of a new round of talks over the North American Free Trade Agreement, which the U.S. president has threatened to withdraw from if he can’t negotiate a better agreement with Canada and Mexico.

“We’re negotiatin­g a NAFTA deal. It’s time after all of these years and we’ll see what happens. It’s possible we won’t be able to make a deal and it’s possible that we will,” Trump said, noting the close relations between the two countries and leaders.

“We have to protect our workers and in all fairness the prime minister wants to protect Canada and his people also. So we’ll see what happens with NAFTA,” Trump said, adding that it “has to be fair to both countries.”

Trudeau, in his brief remarks to reporters, spoke of the ties that bind the two neighbors and major trading partners.

“We have an incredibly close relationsh­ip. Two countries that are interwoven in our economies and our cultures and our peoples,” Trudeau said. “But we have a good partnershi­p ... and that’s why having an ongoing constructi­ve relationsh­ip between the president and the prime minister is really important.”

The trade negotiatio­ns this week in Washington have gotten off to a rocky start, with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce warning that the Trump administra­tion might be sabotaging the talks with unrealisti­c proposals.

Blowing up the deal appears to be Trump’s favored choice. On the campaign trail, he called NAFTA a job-killing disaster.

The end of NAFTA would send economic tremors across the continent. American farmers depend on Mexico’s market. Manufactur­ers have built complicate­d supply chains that cross NAFTA borders. Consumers have benefited from lower costs.

NAFTA erased most trade barriers along the United States, Canada and Mexico and led to an explosion in trade between the three countries. But critics say the pact sent hundreds of thousands of U.S. manufactur­ing jobs to Mexico, where corporatio­ns took advantage of low-wage labor. The Canadian prime minister, making his second visit to the White House this year, was also expected to raise the Trump administra­tion’s recent decision to hit Canadian manufactur­er Bombardier with punishing tariffs on its C Series airliner.

U.S.-based Boeing alleges that Bombardier gets unfair subsidies from the Canadian and British government­s.

Trump has repeatedly criticized Canada, alleging that it unfairly blocks U.S. dairy products and subsidizes its softwood lumber industry.

 ?? Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images ?? Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (center) meets with members of the House Ways and Means Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (center) meets with members of the House Ways and Means Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.

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