NAFTA: As big decisions approach, ministers to attend longer-than-expected round
WASHINGTON — The ministers leading the effort to forge a new North American Free Trade Agreement will gather for a longer-than-expected round of talks next week as negotiations enter a sensitive political period with big decisions looming.
Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, American counterpart Robert Lighthizer and Mexico’s Ildefonso Guajardo will be on hand Jan. 29 for the closing of the latest round, which was originally scheduled to take place Jan. 23-28 but will now get underway Jan. 21.
The end of the talks has been pushed an extra day, in part, to accommodate those ministers travelling from economic talks in Davos. There’s also an acute desire to make progress in this round, to build momentum in hopes of avoiding some approaching political shoals.
There are no talks scheduled beyond March and U.S. President Donald Trump must choose his subsequent course of action: start the process of cancelling NAFTA as threatened, keep negotiating, or hit the pause button for a few months as Mexico and the U.S. plunge into national elections.