The NAFTA-2 negotiations seem to be faltering after the fourth round of talks recently held in the United States.Ā The Trump administration isĀ pushingĀ Mexico and CanadaĀ aggressively to include provisions from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) in order to renegotiate NAFTA in a way that benefits US corporations.Ā Mexico and the US are under particularly highĀ pressure to complete the talks successfully as each country has major elections in 2018.
News reports of the highly secretive talks describe theĀ negotiations as hitting roadblocks. While this is good news, if it is accurate,Ā this is the time for people in Mexico, Canada and the United States to call for each government to not only withdraw from the talks but also to abandon the corporate model of trade that puts profits before protection of people and the planet. Our view is ā if it doesnāt work, donāt fix it, get rid of it and adopt a new and more positive trade model.
Visit TradeForPeopleAndPlanet.org to learn more.
In āNAFTA talks bog down over U.S. demands as latest round concludes,ā the Los Angeles Time reports,
āAfter seven straight days of talks fraught with emotion, officials representing the U.S., Canada and Mexico were at seeming loggerheads over several American proposals that observers fear could derail the negotiations and ultimately cause an unraveling of the 23-year-oldĀ North American Free Trade Agreement.ā
Further, they report āobservers briefed by trade negotiators said the mood during the latest session of talks had turned grim and pessimistic, and that most everyone expected Canada and Mexico to roundly reject U.S. efforts to weaken NAFTAās regional structure with U.S. protectionist measures consistent with Trumpās āAmerica firstā agenda.ā
ReutersĀ described a grim reality, writing that the disagreements are so extreme that they could result in the end of the trade agreement:
āSome downcast participants said the demands, unveiled this week in line with Trumpās āAmerica Firstā agenda, have increased the odds of NAFTAās demise. At the very least, they could make it impossible to reach a deal renewing the treaty before a year-end deadline.ā
CNBC also warnedĀ that timeĀ may runĀ out ā saying the negotiators are working on a schedule thatĀ is āa very tight negotiating schedule ā described as āinsaneā by one official.āĀ The initialĀ goal was to complete the talks in December of this year in order to avoid the Mexican presidential election.Ā The current pro-corporate president,Ā Enrique PeƱa Nieto,Ā is very unpopular and is likely to be replaced.
The divisions between the countries were on clear display as the round of talks wound down. The Star reports that CanadianĀ āForeign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland blasted the Trump administrationās NAFTA proposals publicly for the first time in an awkward joint press conference in Washington on Tuesday, the clearest sign yet that negotiations are strained to the breaking point.ā
Freeland denounced the USĀ for āan approach that seeks to undermine NAFTA rather than modernize it,ā warning that the āunconventionalā proposals from President Donald Trumpās administration would āturn back the clockā and put tens of thousands of jobs at risk. Lighthizer criticized Canada and Mexico for refusing to agree to provisions that they previously accepted in the TPP.
Things are going so badly in the negotiations that the parties have decided to take a short break. Rather than meeting every two weeks, theyāve pushed the next round back to a month and the deadline for completion of the re-negotiations into early 2018.
BBC reports thatĀ in an October meeting with Justin Trudeau, President Trump said he would pull out of NAFTA and be open to a new bilateral agreement between the US and Canada if the NAFTA-2 negotiations fail.
NAFTA was the start of a long line of disastrous trade deals that put the interests of large corporations ahead of the necessities of people and planet. Now that people see the results of this model of trade such as a race to the bottom in wages and workerās rights, environmental destruction and an erosion of democracy, there is widespread opposition to āfree trade.ā This was evident in the large movement of movements that stopped the TPP and stalled the TTIP.
This is the time to be strong and persistent in our demand for an end to NAFTA and a new era of positive trade. Trade agreements could be negotiated in the open with broad input from all sectors of society. Trade agreements could drive a race to the top in wages and worker protections around the world. Trade agreements could also include enforceable environmental standards and promote meaningful steps to address the climate crisis.
For now, the best way to stop NAFTA is to heighten the controversies so that the talks continue to be delayed. As we did with the TPP, we can push the talks into the election season and make our positive agenda for trade a part of campaigns.
If you are interested in getting involved, please sign up at TradeForPeopleandPlanet.org. Remaking trade in a positive way is another route to the future we need.
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