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Big NAFTA changes sought

NAFTA negotiations are underway — and the United States says it wants major changes to the agreement.

U.S. trade czar Robert Lighthizer welcomed his Canadian and Mexican counterparts to Washington, D.C., on Wednesday for what he called a momentous occasion.`

''This is an historic day for the United States,'' Lighthizer said. ''American politicians have been promising to renegotiate NAFTA for years. But today President Trump is going to fulfil those promises.''

Lighthizer said he shares Donald Trump's views on trade — and that the U.S. wants substantial changes to the deal. A few months ago, the president said he was pleased with Canadian trade, and only wanted a few tweaks.

"I want to be clear: He is not interested in a mere tweaking of a few provisions, and a couple of updated chapters," Lighthizer said. "We feel that NAFTA has fundamentally failed many, many Americans."

That includes changes to the rules for importing auto parts, higher labour standards and a new dispute-settlement process that respects the sovereignty of individual countries. The dispute settlement question has been a historic irritant with Canada.

It was the final issue resolved on the final night of negotiations in the 1987 agreement, and even caused Canada to withdraw from the talks at one point. At issue is whether international panels should have power to settle cross-border disputes between companies.

Canada has been resistant to allowing American courts to decide such cases — it has, in fact, successfully used the dispute-settlement body in Chapter 19 in the softwood lumber fight, for instance.

It's true that NAFTA has benefited many, in particular those in the farm sector, Lighthizer said.

But, some 700,000 lost U.S. jobs are linked to NAFTA, he added: "The numbers are clear."

Lighthizer's Canadian counterpart, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, pointed to statistics showing Canada-U.S. trade is balanced. Freeland opened her remarks by holding up a picture of U.S. and Mexican firefighters helping to douse forest fire flames in British Columbia.

She said she wants that spirit of mutual benefit to guide the talks.

Such spirit also rang through in the remarks of Mexico's lead minister, Ildefonso Guajardo. He said the talks should seek to produce a "win-win-win" for all three countries.



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