Canada and the United States are making progress and could have a deal by Friday on a rewrite of the North American Free Trade Agreement, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said today.
As the crucial phase of talks continued in Washington to try to bridge their differences, Trudeau's note of optimism raised the chances NAFTA would continue as a three-nation pact, despite President Donald Trump's threat on Monday to leave Canada on the sidelines.
Trudeau said, "There is a possibility of getting to a good deal for Canada by Friday," the day the United States has set to have at least the broad accord completed.
But any agreement "will hinge on whether or not there is ultimately a good deal for Canada," Trudeau said at a student rally in northern Ontario.
"I have said from the very beginning no NAFTA deal is better than a bad NAFTA deal," he added.
After Mexico paved the way by agreeing to a NAFTA 2.0 with the United States on Monday, Canada's Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said yesterday "a lot has been accomplished" in her two meetings with US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer.
The United States and Canada are now engaged in "an extremely intense period in the negotiations," she told reporters, and trade officials had worked late into the night outstanding issues.
Freeland declined to get into specifics on what issues remained, saying she and Lighthizer agreed not to discuss the details in public.
Lighthizer said he will officially notify the US Congress on Friday of the intention to enter into a new trade pact in 90 days. The White House then would have until September 30 to present Congress with the final NAFTA agreement.
The sticking points between Ottawa and Washington likely will center on Canada's managed dairy market and how to handle some disputes among NAFTA partners.
Ottawa could offer US dairy farmers a small increased share of the market as it did with the EU in a free trade pact last year.
Negotiators have worked for a year to update and rewrite the 25-year-old free trade pact. But in the last five weeks, Washington and Mexico City held talks to resolve their bilateral issues, especially on the auto industry rules, without Ottawa.
While critics said Canada had been frozen out, Freeland has repeatedly stressed to reporters that she remained in close touch with her US and Mexican counterparts throughout the summer and had already achieved "a high-level agreement with the US" on some the pending issues on autos and labour rights.
She also met late yesterday night with her Mexican counterparts, who had remained in Washington after announcing the breakthrough with the United States.
She praised Mexico's willingness to make difficult concessions on auto trade and labour issues, which helped pave the way for a three-party agreement.
"Our workers have been concerned for a long time...about the way in which trade agreements can harm blue-collar workers in high-wage countries," she said.
"There are some important things that we believe that we have accomplished together with the United States and with some significant compromises that Mexico was prepared to make to support Canadian workers."
That "set the stage for very intensive conversations and negotiations that we're going to have."
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