U.S.-Mexico trade deal text to exclude Canada,
irritating U.S. lawmakers
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[September 28, 2018]
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration is expected to release the text of its trade agreement
with Mexico as early as Friday, launching a contentious congressional
approval process as it tries to coax Canada into a revamped North
American Free Trade Agreement.
U.S. lawmakers briefed by U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer on
Thursday said that they expect the long-awaited document to largely
exclude language related to Canada, but were still hoping for Canada to
join.
They expressed little optimism that a deal with Canada could be reached
quickly, noting disagreements over dairy and dispute settlement
provisions. Some Democrats said they could not support a NAFTA trade
deal without Canada.
"Canada is exceptionally important. I think it would be malpractice,
both for economic and political reasons, not to have a major agreement
with Canada," said Senator Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the tax and
trade Senate Finance Committee. "I think leaving Canada out of a new
deal amounts to the Trump administration surrendering on fixing NAFTA."
Wyden is from Oregon, a state that trade more with Canada than Mexico.
A Trump administration official and congressional aides said the
U.S.-Mexico text was due for release on Friday, but a USTR spokesman
declined to comment on timing.
The text needs to be published by late Sunday night - 60 days ahead of a
Nov. 30 deadline for President Donald Trump and Mexico's president,
Enrique Pena Nieto, to sign the deal before a new Mexican president
takes office on Dec 1.
DETAILS ON AUTOS, LABOR
The text will flesh out an agreement in principle reached by the United
States and Mexico on Aug. 27 that aims to rebalance automotive trade
between the two countries and modernize the nearly 25-year-old NAFTA
with new chapters on digital trade, stronger labor and environmental
standards.
The text is expected to conform to details previously released on
tighter automotive rules requiring an increase in regional value content
to 75 percent from 62.5 percent previously, with 40-45 percent coming
from "high wage" areas, effectively the United States.
Auto industry executives say it is unlikely those targets can be met if
Canada is not part of the deal, given supply chains that crisscross
NAFTA borders multiple times.
Details are also expected on an automotive side-letter that preserves
the Trump administration's ability to impose global national security
tariffs on imports of autos and auto parts, granting Mexico a quota for
tariff-free exports to the United States that allows some expansion of
production..
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A commercial truck with a Canada, United States and Mexico flag on
its side is seen crossing over the Ambassador Bridge into Windsor,
Ontario from Detroit, Michigan U.S. August 29, 2018. REUTERS/Rebecca
Cook/File Photo
Other key details expected to be revealed include how new labor standards will
be enforced and trade dispute settlement arrangements between the United States
and Mexico. The United States has said that Mexico agreed to eliminate a system
of settlement panels to arbitrate disputes over anti-dumping and anti-dumping
tariffs.
But a Mexican source close to the talks said that in exchange for this, the
United States agreed to drop a demand for tariffs to protect U.S. seasonal
produce growers.
Mexico also secured an exemption from U.S. "global safeguard" tariffs such as
those imposed in January on washing machines and solar panels, the source said.
Mexican-made products were hit by both of those actions aimed at protecting U.S.
producers from import surges.
VOTE NEXT YEAR
The publishing of the text starts a months-long process for Congressional
approval that will require a lengthy analysis study by the independent U.S.
international Trade Commission and a series of notification periods before an
up-or-down vote can occur.
Lawmakers briefed by Lighthizer said he told them the earliest that a vote could
occur - either on a U.S.-Mexico deal or a trilateral deal including Canada -
would be February or March 2019, after the Congress elected in November is sworn
into office.
Democrats could significantly strengthen their numbers in the November elections
or take control of the House of Representatives.
Several Democrats questioned whether the Trump administration has the legal
authority to proceed with a Mexico-only deal when prior notifications under the
"fast-track" trade negotiating authority law were for a trilateral deal
including both Mexico and Canada.
"That’s not what’s being proposed right now," said Representative Suzan DelBene
of Washington state. "Obviously Congress will have a say in that."
(Additional reporting by Anthony Esposito in Mexico City; Editing by Nick
Zieminski)
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