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						Canada to stick to guns at NAFTA talks despite Trump 
						pressure
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		 [September 05, 2018] 
		 By David Lawder and David Ljunggren 
 WASHINGTON/OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada heads 
		into talks in Washington on Wednesday to renew NAFTA determined not to 
		back down on key issues despite threats from U.S. President Donald Trump 
		to retaliate against the Canadian economy unless Ottawa gives ground 
		quickly.
 
 Trump, fresh from wrapping up a side deal last week with Mexico, the 
		third member of the North American Free Trade Agreement, has said he is 
		ready to slap auto tariffs on Canada or exclude the country from the 
		pact altogether.
 
 The president says the 1994 pact - which underpins $1.2 trillion in 
		annual trade - caused hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs to 
		leave the United States.
 
 The Trump administration, eager for an agreement to be signed soon, 
		wants to scrap a dispute-resolution mechanism that Canadian Prime 
		Minister Justin Trudeau says is crucial.
 
		
		 
		The two sides, which failed to settle their differences last week, are 
		also arguing over U.S. demands for more access to Canada's closed dairy 
		market.
 Trudeau said on Tuesday: "There are a number of things we absolutely 
		must see in a renegotiated NAFTA," and reiterated he would not sign a 
		bad deal.
 
 Trump notified Congress that he intended to sign the agreement by the 
		end of November and officials said the text would be published by around 
		Oct. 1.
 
 But Canadian officials, who note increasing political pressure on Trump 
		from U.S. business and labor circles to keep NAFTA as a trilateral 
		arrangement, said they were in no hurry.
 
		
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			The flags of Canada, Mexico and the U.S. are seen on a lectern 
			before a joint news conference on the closing of the seventh round 
			of NAFTA talks in Mexico City, Mexico, March 5, 2018. REUTERS/Edgard 
			Garrido/File Photo 
            
			 
"We're not saying we don't want to move swiftly to try and get a deal. But I 
think certainly we were always intending to take as long as it was going to 
take," said a government source, who declined to be identified given the 
sensitivity of the situation. 
"We're seeing goodwill on all sides and if we see some more flexibility, then I 
think we can start to see things moving in a good direction," added the source.
 Negotiators have blown through several deadlines since the talks started in 
August 2017. As the process grinds on, some in Washington insist Trump cannot 
pull out of NAFTA without the approval of Congress.
 
 "Trump is relying on bluster and bullying in a desperate attempt to get Congress 
to swallow his half-baked deal. You can't fix NAFTA without fixing issues with 
Canada," said Senator Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance 
Committee, which oversees trade.
 
 (Writing by David Ljunggren; Editing by Peter Cooney)
 
				 
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