U.S. no longer needs ‘improper’ metal tariffs as negotiating tactic: Freeland
OTTAWA — Roadblocks to ratifying the new North American trade pact are being raised on both sides of the American political divide, as unresolved trade issues overshadowed Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland’s trip to a NATO summit in Washington.
Whether it was the Trump administration’s “improper” imposition of metals tariffs as leverage in the contentious renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement or the “Pandora’s Box” Democrats would open by seeking to change the agreement, Freeland made clear the final hurdles for the continent’s new trade pact remain formidable.
Freeland took that message to Washington on Thursday, where the continued existence of U.S. steel and aluminum duties dominated discussion ahead of the NATO summit she was attending, casting further uncertainty over the fate of the new trade deal signed by Canada, the U.S. and Mexico last fall but not yet ratified in their legislatures.