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Mexico Says It Called Trump's Bluff Over NAFTA Exit

While Mexico and Canada helped change Trump's mind, so did members of his cabinet, US lawmakers and US producers that would be hurt by a US exit from NAFTA, a Mexican minister said.
Mitra Taj
May 12 2017
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While Mexico and Canada helped change Trump's mind, so did members of his cabinet, US lawmakers and US producers that would be hurt by a US exit from NAFTA, a Mexican minister said.
US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters after his meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the White House in Washington, US, May 10, 2017. Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque
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US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters after his meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the White House in Washington, US, May 10, 2017. Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

Mexico City: Mexico said on Thursday, May 11, that it had called US President Donald Trump's bluff over his suggestion that he only decided to stay in the North American Free Trade Agreement as a favour to the leaders of Mexico and Canada after they asked him to renegotiate the deal.

However, Mexico's government said it had sent a very different message to the US during a crisis over NAFTA's future late last month, when Trump considered starting the six-month process for withdrawing from the accord.

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"The message was: if you guys think we're going to start negotiations with the trigger pulled on a US exit in six months, forget about it!" Mexican economy minister Ildefonso Guajardo told an audience at the Mexico Business Forum.

"If you do that, just get out already – because there's no way we're negotiating under those conditions," he said.

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Guajardo said talk of the US preparing to leave NAFTA was likely part of a strategy to press Congress to approve Trump's pick for US trade representative.

While Mexico and Canada helped change Trump's mind, so did members of his cabinet, US lawmakers and US producers that would be hurt by a US exit from NAFTA – showing the limits to Trump's unilateral moves, the minister argued.

Guajardo said the plan to trigger a US withdrawal of NAFTA was done "in desperation, which occurs very frequently these days in those parts" – an apparent jab at the way Trump has rolled out some of his key policy proposals.

Mexico's ties with the US have been strained by Trump's repeated pledge to dump NAFTA if he cannot secure better terms for US workers and industry in a renegotiation.

The rhetoric has encouraged efforts by Mexico to diversify its economy away from dependence on the US.

Guajardo said Mexico was tightening trade ties with China, deepening deals to get better market access to markets in Brazil and Argentina, making progress on a free trade deal with Jordan and updating an agreement with the EU.

If the US did withdraw from NAFTA in a "worst-case scenario," it would not necessarily mean the end of the deal, Guajardo said. Mexico and Canada could opt to make it the framework for their trade relationship, he said.

(Reuters)

This article went live on May twelfth, two thousand seventeen, at thirty-five minutes past eleven in the morning.

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