After more than a year of talks, Mexico and the United States
announced a bilateral deal on Monday, setting the stage for
Canada to rejoin negotiations to modernize 24-year-old NAFTA
which accounts for over $1 trillion in annual trade between the
three nations.
Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland told reporters on
Tuesday that Mexico's concessions on auto rules of origin and
labor rights was a crucial breakthrough, clearing the way for
Ottawa to resume talks with United States this week.
After being sidelined from the talks for more than two months,
Freeland will be under pressure to accept terms the United
States and Mexico worked out. The U.S. Congress also wants a
deal that includes Canada.
"The fact that agreement on those difficult issues for Mexico
was able to be reached definitely clears the way for us to have
significant, substantive, and I hope productive, conversations
with the U.S. this week," Freeland said after a brief meeting
with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer.
She dodged questions on what points Canada would be willing to
concede on, noting that Ottawa's key issues are well known.
"We will, as we have done throughout this negotiation, stand up
for the Canadian national interest and for Canadian values,
while looking for areas where we can find a compromise that
everyone can live with," she said.
U.S. President Donald Trump warned he could proceed with a deal
with Mexico alone and levy tariffs on Canada if it does not come
on board with the revised trade terms.
Despite the optimism, there are some sticking points. One of the
issues for Canada in the revised deal is the U.S. effort to dump
the Chapter 19 dispute resolution mechanism that hinders the
United States from pursuing anti-dumping and anti-subsidy cases.
Lighthizer said on Monday that Mexico had agreed to eliminate
the mechanism.
Other hurdles include intellectual property rights and
extensions of copyright protections to 75 years from 50, higher
threshold than Canada has previously supported.
But with even these hurdles, this is the closest the three
nations have come to clinching a deal, and they race toward a
Friday deadline to reach an in-principle deal.
"I think that what they probably need by Friday is some
indication from Canada to the Americans that it's ready to play
ball, that they're ready to negotiate in good faith," said Mark
Warner, a trade lawyer with MAAW Law, which specializes in
Canadian and U.S. law.
"If Chrystia Freeland goes down there and she starts going on
and on about red lines again, then I think it's all over," he
added.
(Reporting by Julie Gordon and Sharay Angulo; Writing by Denny
Thomas; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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