Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

With Trump's New Tariff Threats, New NAFTA Once Again Hangs In The Balance

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 May, 2019 07:09 PM

    OTTAWA — President Donald Trump says he'll put tariffs on all goods from Mexico starting next month, a surprise move that could blow up chances of ratifying the new North American free-trade agreement.


    Beginning with a series of tweets late Thursday, just hours after U.S. Vice-President Mike Pence's whirlwind trip to Ottawa to push the trade agreement forward, Trump said he wants Mexico to stop migrants from Central and South America from reaching the U.S. border.


    "For decades, the United States has suffered the severe and dangerous consequences of illegal immigration," the president said in a followup statement issued via the White House. "Sadly, Mexico has allowed this situation to go on for many years, growing only worse with the passage of time. From a safety, national security, military, economic, and humanitarian standpoint, we cannot allow this grave disaster to continue."


    Unless it does, he said, he'll tax all imports to the U.S. from Mexico beginning June 10, with tariffs starting at five per cent and increasing to 25 per cent by October.


    "Should Mexico choose not to co-operate on reducing unlawful migration, the sustained imposition of Tariffs will produce a massive return of jobs back to American cities and towns. Remember, our great country has been the “piggy bank” from which everybody wants only to TAKE."


    A week ago, the United States lifted tariffs on steel and aluminum from Canada and Mexico, which both countries said were standing in the way of ratifying the new three-country trade deal they signed at the end of last year. The new tariffs Trump is threatening for Mexico would be much broader and end up higher than the ones he just took off.


    The new trade agreement doesn't kick in until it's approved by lawmakers in all three countries.


    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau introduced the bill that would do it in Canada earlier this week. The clock is ticking loudly, with just a few weeks before the House of Commons is to break for the summer. It's not expected to sit again before the fall election.


    In the United States, ratification is stalled on Capitol Hill by Democrats who want stronger protections for environmental and labour standards, to the point of asking for negotiations to be reopened; Pence said Thursday that he believes Congress can make major progress on ratification this summer all the same.


    In Mexico, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador had just sent the new agreement to the Mexican Senate for approval later this year.


    Friday, Lopez Obrador's trade negotiator called Trump's threat "most serious" but held back on harsh criticism. Jesus Seade said if the United States imposes new tariffs Mexico will have to respond forcefully but he wants to see how real the threat is.


    A senior member of Trump's party, Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, said Trump's fresh tariff threats are bad strategy. The Republican, who chairs the Senate's finance committee, said it's a mistake to combine trade policy and border security.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Wildfire Scorches More Than Two Square Kilometres Of Woodland In Southern B.C.

    Wildfire Scorches More Than Two Square Kilometres Of Woodland In Southern B.C.
    OSOYOOS, B.C. — An aggressive wildfire burning west of Osoyoos near Highway 3 has charred more than 2.5-square kilometres of bush in barely 12 hours.

    Wildfire Scorches More Than Two Square Kilometres Of Woodland In Southern B.C.

    Experts Search Rubble Of Former Victoria Hotel After Suspicious Fire

    Experts Search Rubble Of Former Victoria Hotel After Suspicious Fire
    VICTORIA — Police and fire investigators in Victoria are sifting through the charred remains of the Plaza Hotel, which was destroyed last week by a fire that police say is considered suspicious.

    Experts Search Rubble Of Former Victoria Hotel After Suspicious Fire

    B.C. Needs Goals, Timeline For Potential Money Laundering Inquiry: Wally Oppal

    Wally Oppal said he believes his inquiry had an impact after it wrapped in 2012. Police now investigate these cases far differently than they did when serial killer Robert Pickton was preying on vulnerable women, he said.

    B.C. Needs Goals, Timeline For Potential Money Laundering Inquiry: Wally Oppal

    Global Affairs Says One Canadian Among Four Killed In Float Plane Crash In Alaska

    VANCOUVER — A Canadian killed Monday in a mid-air collision involving two sightseeing planes in Alaska is one of two people still missing, Princess Cruises says in a statement.

    Global Affairs Says One Canadian Among Four Killed In Float Plane Crash In Alaska

    Small Communities Grapple With 'Huge Challenge' Of Opioid Crisis

    OTTAWA — In the small town of Arnprior, nestled into the Ottawa Valley, at least five suspected opioid overdoses in the span of week prompted police to issue a public warning.    

    Small Communities Grapple With 'Huge Challenge' Of Opioid Crisis

    Scientists Challenge Claim That Labrador Is Site Of Planet's Oldest Life

    A team of geological researchers is challenging claims that some of the earliest forms of known life existed in northern Labrador.    

    Scientists Challenge Claim That Labrador Is Site Of Planet's Oldest Life