NAFTA: Top U.S. lawmakers express optimism, shrug off talk of early bumps

Top U.S. lawmakers tasked with an oversight role in the NAFTA negotiations are expressing confidence in the state of the discussions, downplaying talk of a halting start to the process.

The two highest-ranking members of the U.S. Senate finance committee legally designated with monitoring the negotiations have brushed aside reports of early bumps.

The Republican chair of the committee said Tuesday he still thinks a new NAFTA is achievable this year.

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“I think we’re gonna get that done,” said Orrin Hatch.

“I don’t know when. But I think we’ll get it done – certainly before we finish this year.”

The countries have set a target for reaching a deal by the end of the year, before Mexico and then the U.S. become embroiled in national elections. That creates a sense of urgency – the countries are trying to cram more than a half-dozen negotiating rounds into a few months.

There was some early turbulence in the first two rounds, according to some sources.

One suggested the countries declined to even discuss some issues the others considered key. And one outsider briefed on the talks says the U.S. arrived with text copied from the now-dormant Trans-Pacific Partnership and assumed – incorrectly – that the other countries might simply rubber-stamp it.

The top Democrat on the committee chalked it up to early negotiating games.

“It strikes me as the sparring still (being) in the early stages,” said Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon. The softwood lumber hardliner, however, cautioned that he would oppose an agreement if it includes some kind of softwood settlement that hurts his state’s industry.

The Canadian government was discussing NAFTA at a cabinet retreat in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland would not say whether U.S. negotiators have threatened to withdraw from the talks, as the president has. But she said: “The tone … has been extremely cordial.”

She even joked the countries might start their own book club. She said the lead ministers for Canada, Mexico and the U.S. have taken to discussing their favourite books at the negotiating rounds: “It’s a very friendly environment.”

Any deal would eventually require a vote in the respective national legislatures. And, in the U.S., lawmakers are formally involved from start to finish.

U.S. law requires trade officials negotiating the deal to regularly brief and share documents with key committee members in Congress – which has constitutional power over international commerce.

After two negotiating rounds, officials say they have tabled about two dozen texts on a variety of issues – although they have yet to enter the more sensitive areas. Those more difficult discussions will start coming up in the next rounds.

The next round will be in Ottawa later this month. The talks then return to the U.S. and then Mexico.

A Canadian trade adviser says the U.S. might have asked for these negotiations, but it hasn’t moved very quickly: “There was a certain paucity of text the U.S. brought to the table on certain key issues,” said Eric Miller, president of Rideau Potomac Strategy Group in Washington.

And he said Canada and Mexico are in no hurry to simply copy the promises they made in TPP. He pointed out those commitments were made to secure a brand new trade deal, with new partners like Japan and Australia.

The U.S. can’t assume they will just copy-and-paste those promises into an old agreement.

“The TPP language was agreed to in the context of a 12-country agreement. The core benefit for Canada in many respects was market access to Japan,” Miller said.

“Canada is certainly not wanting to give away concessions it may have made in TPP, for free – lest the U.S. come in and say well we’ll take TPP as a starting point and push for something further. Where you set the baseline is incredibly important.”

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