Freeland expected to go to D.C. for late-game NAFTA talks as political pressure ramps up - Action News
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Politics

Freeland expected to go to D.C. for late-game NAFTA talks as political pressure ramps up

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland is expected to go to Washington this week for late-stage talks with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer on the fate of NAFTA, CBC News has confirmed.

U.S. reportedly eager to see an agreement-in-principle in time for Peru summit meeting this month

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland will travel to Washington for talks with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer this week. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freelandis expected to go toWashington this week for late-stage talks with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizeron the fate of NAFTA, CBC News has confirmed.

The window for reaching a deal on a renegotiatedNAFTA is becoming increasingly narrow, with both the U.S. and Mexico facing potentially fractious election campaigns that could derail the talks.

CBC has notconfirmed that Freeland will be meeting with her Mexican counterparts, who are also in Washington for meetings with the Trump administration this week.

The high-level discussions come as new signs of progress haveemerged from the negotiations.

BloombergNews reportedMonday that U.S. President Donald Trump is eager to see an agreement-in-principle onNAFTAin time for the Summit of the Americas meeting in Peru later this month.

A senior source, speaking toCBCNews on the condition of anonymity, suggested an agreement-in-principle could be reached in the coming weeks.

"Americans are being more positive, more constructive than they have been in the last eightmonths," the source said. "Canada is quite prepared to roll up its sleeves to get something done, but Canada won't roll over."

While an agreement-in-principle could be in reach, thefiner details of the legal text mighttake muchlonger to nail down.

Negotiators from Mexico and Canada have been expecting an eighth round ofNAFTAtalks to start next week in Washington, during which aspects of a final deal could be settled.

Wishful thinking?

Some observers monitoring the talks closelysuggest the idea of concluding an agreement in principle in time for the Peru summit is a productof wishful thinking.

"Even under the best circumstances, if these three countries were holding hands and skipping through the fields, it would still be almost impossible to do itin two weeks," said Laura Dawson, director of the Canada Institute at the Wilson Centre in Washington.

Dawson told CBC's Power and Politics that, based on her conversations with Canadian and Mexican negotiators, she believes "they're though about 30-40 per cent of a really difficult, really complicated negotiation.

"And the standard is, you do the easy stuff first. All of the hard work has been back-end loaded, so we're looking at months and months more of negotiations," Dawson added.

"Nothing real can happenin two weeks."

Trump talked down the deal Tuesday ahead of a working lunch with Baltic state leaders. Speaking to reporters at the White House, he claimed NAFTA has been a "cash cow" for Mexico and threatened to pull out the deal ifthe country couldn't stop a caravan of Honduran migrants from approaching the U.S.-Mexico border.

Trump talks tough on NAFTA

6 years ago
Duration 0:27
President says the trade deal has been bad for the U.S.

"They have to do this, otherwise I'm not going to do the NAFTA deal," he said ofhis request that Mexican officials intercept the Central American migrants.

"NAFTA has been great for Mexico. It has not been good for the United States.A lot of businesses have closed down because of NAFTA. You look at empty plants all over the place and this is from years ago and they still haven't recovered. NAFTA has been a terrible deal for the United States.We're renegotiating the deal right now, but it will still be good for Mexico and for Canada."

But the senior source suggested pressurefrom U.S. agricultural interests on the Trump administration which is facing new tariffs from China in the wake of Trump's trade standoff with the Asian nationcould encourage the Americans to put pen to paper on a deal.

U.S. farmers have benefited greatly from NAFTA.U.S. agricultural exports to Mexico and Canada were worth $8.9 billion in 1993, before the agreement kicked in. Today,they're worth $39 billion and accountfor 30 per centof America's farm exports.

A number of states with influential farm lobby groupsnamely Missouri, Indiana andSouth Dakotaare facing key elections this fall, with a number of Senate seats up for grabs.

In late February, Canada's Ambassador to the U.S., David MacNaughton, saidhe believed NAFTA negotiators could reach an agreement by the end of March.

At the time, MacNaughtonsaid progress had been made on the "wiring and plumbing" of the agreement to the point where all three countries could iron out their differences on the more substantial issues in the subsequent two months.