U.S. House Democratic leader: NAFTA
should stay a trilateral deal
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[September 15, 2018]
By Richard Cowan and David Ljunggren
WASHINGTON/OTTAWA (Reuters) - U.S. House of
Representatives Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi on Friday warned the
Trump administration that NAFTA should be maintained as a trilateral
pact between the United States, Mexico and Canada and not just as a
U.S.-Mexico arrangement.
Pelosi's remarks are significant because whatever deal to renew the
North American Free Trade Agreement is ultimately reached will be
reviewed by the next Congress that convenes in January. Pelosi could be
the speaker of the House if Democrats win this November's congressional
midterm elections.
Talks to update NAFTA, which U.S. President Donald Trump says is unfair
to the United States and must be radically revised, have been bogged
down amid disagreements between Canadian and American negotiators.
Trump last month announced a side deal with Mexico and has warned Ottawa
that he is prepared to leave Canada out if it fails to accept terms more
favorable to the United States.
As House speaker, Pelosi sets the legislative agenda, and often has the
political muscle to assure passage or defeat of initiatives.
"I think it should be trilateral," she told reporters, adding she did
not think it would be "in the interest of this hemisphere" to turn NAFTA
into a bilateral deal.
The U.S. administration wants the text of a deal ready by Oct. 1 but
Canadian officials say they are not rushing, given the remaining
differences. The two sides are arguing over dispute settlement
mechanisms and a U.S. demand that Canada open up its protected dairy
market.
Canadian officials say privately that some concessions will be needed on
dairy, an approach that has alarmed the politically influential farming
community.
Most Canadian dairy farmers live in the populous provinces of Ontario
and Quebec, where Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's ruling Liberal Party
needs to do well if he is to retain power in an election set for October
2019.
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House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) speaks during a press
conference on the Trump Administration's tax cuts at the U.S.
Capitol Visitors Center in Washington, U.S., on June 22, 2018.
REUTERS/Toya Sarno Jordan/File Photo
Pierre Lampron, president of the Dairy Farmers of Canada lobby
group, planned to meet Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland
on Friday to ask her about NAFTA. The DFC said it had asked for the
meeting.
Freeland's office did not respond to a request for comment.
Trudeau said on Thursday he wanted a good NAFTA deal as soon as
possible, but did not answer directly when asked if he felt the end
of September was the final deadline for talks.
Mexico said on Wednesday it had to be ready to pursue a bilateral
deal with the United States if Ottawa and Washington did not come to
terms.
But Pelosi said she was seeking more details on the results of the
U.S.-Mexico negotiations, adding she had instructed aides to set up
briefings for rank-and-file lawmakers.
"Any arrangement of that kind, of that length of being in effect
should be subjected to some scrutiny," she said.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and David Ljunggren; Editing by
Marguerita Choy)
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