Trump, Mexico expect progress in stalled NAFTA talks
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[July 24, 2018]
By Anthony Esposito and Adriana Barrera
PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump spoke warmly of Mexico's incoming leftist
president on Monday, saying he expected to get "something worked out" on
NAFTA, while a top Mexican official said there was scope to revive the
trade talks this week.
"We're talking to Mexico on NAFTA, and I think we're going to have
something worked out. The new president, terrific person," Trump said in
a speech at the White House about American manufacturing.
"We're talking to them about doing something very dramatic, very
positive for both countries, he said, without giving more details.
Talks to reshape the 1994 trade accord have been underway since last
August. But they stalled in the run-up to the July 1 presidential
election in Mexico, which produced a landslide victory for veteran
leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.
The United States, Mexico and Canada have been at odds over U.S. demands
to impose tougher content rules for the auto industry, as well as
several other proposals, including one that would kill NAFTA after five
years if it is not renegotiated.
Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo, who last week expressed
hope an agreement in principle on NAFTA could be reached by the end of
August, is due to hold talks with U.S. Trade Representative Robert
Lighthizer at the end of the week in Washington.
He will be accompanied by Jesus Seade, the designated chief NAFTA
negotiator of the incoming Mexican administration.
"There's clearly a window of opportunity to be able to bed down a series
of open issues which are not numerous, but are very complex," Guajardo
said on the sidelines of a summit of the Pacific Alliance trade bloc in
the western coastal city of Puerto Vallarta.
Guajardo is due to meet his Canadian counterpart Chrystia Freeland on
Wednesday, also to discuss NAFTA.
After the election, top officials from both the outgoing and new Mexican
governments met in Mexico City with senior Trump administration
officials led by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
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Security cameras are seen next to a placard of the 13th Pacific
Alliance Summit in Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, Mexico July 22, 2018.
REUTERS/Carlos Jasso
Seade said the visit had sent out "excellent" signals.
"We hope these signals translate into a willingness to move forward," Seade told
reporters in Puerto Vallarta.
The talks have been clouded by tit-for-tat measures over trade after the Trump
administration slapped tariffs on U.S. steel and aluminum imports.
The United States is also exploring the possibility of imposing tariffs on auto
imports, though Guajardo said it was too early to speculate on how that would
play out.
Mexico's foreign ministry said on Monday that South Korea had initiated the
process of seeking associate membership in the Pacific Alliance, which comprises
Colombia, Chile, Mexico and Peru and is seeking to deepen free trade.
Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and Canada were last year admitted as
associate members by the alliance. For Mexico, the expansion is part of a push
to diversify its trading partners in the wake of Trump's previous threats to
pull out of NAFTA.
Guajardo indicated that despite his optimism about reaching a deal, risks still
exist.
"The biggest risk is that instead of moving forward with an agenda of opening
and integration, we move backwards, closing our economy and really undoing what
we've built in the last two and a half decades," Guajardo said.
(Reporting by Anthony Esposito and Adriana Barrera; Writing by Dave Graham;
Editing by Tom Brown and Lisa Shumaker)
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