Mexico says it is close to U.S. metals tariff deal,
waiting for Canada
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[May 16, 2019]
By David Lawder and Alexandra Alper
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Mexico is close to
resolving its dispute with the United States over steel and aluminum
tariffs without quotas but hopes Canada can reach a similar agreement
before completing it, a senior Mexican official said on Wednesday.
Jesus Seade, Mexican deputy foreign minister for North America, told
Reuters by telephone that a deal to remove the so-called Section 232
tariffs was "very close" but he wanted Canada to be in the same position
in its negotiations with Washington.
"What we've been talking about for a week," he said, "is eliminating the
232 without any quotas," noting that it was "very possible" Canada could
sign up to a "similar" deal.
Sudden movements in future trade could be handled via a "consultation
and monitoring system," he added, noting Mexico still had the option of
sealing a deal without Canada.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin also expressed optimism about a
resolution to the steel dispute, but a top Canadian official avoided
direct comment on that possibility.
"I think we are close to an understanding with Mexico and Canada," on
resolving the tariffs, Mnuchin said at a U.S. Senate Appropriations
subcommittee hearing. He did not provide any details about the potential
agreement.
Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said she discussed the
tariffs on Canadian metals with U.S. Trade Representative Robert
Lighthizer on Wednesday, but declined to say whether the two countries
were close to a deal.
"We made the case as we have been doing for some time that the best
outcome for both Canadians and Americans would be to lift those tariffs
and to have free trade between our two countries who have this fantastic
trading relationship in place," she told reporters after the meeting in
Washington.
A USTR spokeswoman declined comment on the meeting.
Asked about prospects for a deal, Freeland said she would not discuss
Canada's negotiating strategy. She added that if Washington kept the
tariffs in place, it would be "very, very problematic" for Canadian
ratification of the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement trade deal (USMCA).
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Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland speaks to
reporters after her meeting with U.S. Trade Representative Robert
Lighthizer in Washington, U.S., May 15, 2019. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
TRADE DEAL VOTE
Canada, Mexico and some U.S. lawmakers see lifting the tariffs imposed last year
as imperative for ratifying USMCA, which would replace the 25-year-old North
American Free Trade Agreement. None of the three countries' legislatures has
ratified USMCA.
Canada has been trying to impress on the Trump administration that time is
running out to ratify USMCA this year, a Canadian government source told
Reuters.
A bill to ratify the deal would need approval by Canada's House of Commons,
which adjourns for the summer on June 21 ahead of an October general election.
It will not reconvene until December.
Lighthizer met later with Democratic U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy
Pelosi to discuss the path forward on a potential USMCA vote. A Pelosi aide
called the meeting productive, but offered few details.
"Democrats continued to express our interest in working with the USTR to get to
yes, and will be planning more discussions with the USTR on the key questions
about the USMCA proposal," the aide said.
Mexico and Canada imposed tariffs against a range of U.S. products in
retaliation for Trump's metals duties to put pressure on Washington to repeal
them.
Mexico says it has prepared a revised list of products to spread the pain to
different sectors of the U.S. economy if necessary, but has yet to apply them.
In a sign of thawing tension, Mexico's Seade said it was not the right time to
target new products. "It's not necessary because I think the top priority is to
get a deal first."
(Reporting by David Lawder and Susan Heavey in Washington, David Ljunggren in
Ottawa, Frank Jack Daniel and Dave Graham in Mexico City; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker and Peter Cooney)
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