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		Pence upbeat that Congress will pass USMCA trade deal this year
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		 [September 18, 2019] 
		By Andrea Shalal 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Vice President 
		Mike Pence on Tuesday said he believed Congress would act to pass a new 
		U.S.-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement this year, providing important 
		momentum for the U.S. economy.
 
 Pence told a packed audience at the Heritage Foundation think tank that 
		passage of USMCA would create jobs and trigger increased investment in 
		the United States, while helping President Donald Trump reach a trade 
		deal with China.
 
 "We're going to keep fighting to get the USMCA across the line. I 
		believe we can get it done this year," Pence said.
 
 The Trump administration has been pressing for swift approval of the 
		trade deal. But House Democrats say they want better mechanisms to 
		enforce labor and environmental standards, and to ensure that the deal 
		does not lead to higher drug prices for U.S. consumers.
 
		
		 
		
 CNBC said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told the network in an interview to 
		air later on Tuesday that Democrats aim to get to a place where they can 
		ratify the trade deal, but still have concerns about enforcing it.
 
 "We hope that we’re on a path to 'Yes.' The most important issue 
		outstanding is enforceability," she told CNBC.
 
 Pence said speedy passage of the agreement would help Washington deal 
		more effectively with China. "By bringing North America together ... it 
		will only strengthen the president’s hand as we demand that China end 
		the trade abuses that have characterized the decades of the past," he 
		said.
 
 Pence said the USMCA was "so advanced and so comprehensive" that it 
		could serve as a template for future trade agreements with Britain, the 
		European Union, Japan, or "even China."
 
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			Vice President Mike Pence leaves Downing Street in London, Britain 
			September 5, 2019. REUTERS/Simon Dawson 
            
 
            Martha Barcena, Mexican ambassador to the United States, said she 
			hoped Congress would pass the trade accord this year. She said 
			Mexico, whose parliament has already approved the agreement, was 
			seeking to inform U.S. lawmakers about its newly enacted labor 
			reforms and how they were being funded.
 She told Reuters after Pence's speech that Mexico did not view 
			changes in the text of the agreement as necessary.
 
 "We don’t need changes in the text of the USMCA. We think they can 
			be solved with the current text, and with parallel agreements," she 
			said.
 
 Canada's acting envoy to the United States, Kirsten Hillman, said 
			she was optimistic the measure would pass Congress.
 
 "There's enough will there, and it's still early enough that it can 
			probably move along. We're hearing good things so we're optimistic," 
			she said.
 
 Canada will wait to approve the agreement until after its Oct. 21 
			election, she said, echoing Mexico's reluctance to reopen the trade 
			agreement.
 
 "That's the deal we signed. That's the one that we have started to 
			move through our house," she said.
 
 (Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Dan Grebler)
 
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