Tough talk, tariff threats resurface as USMCA readies for Wednesday debut
WASHINGTON — If the long-awaited debut of Canada’s new trade pact with the United States and Mexico heralds a new dawn in North American relations, Robert Lighthizer sure has a funny way of showing it.
With the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement coming into effect Wednesday, the U.S. trade ambassador reminded a congressional committee that within the velvet glove of trade diplomacy, Donald Trump’s White House wields an iron fist of zero-tolerance enforcement.
And instead of friendly declarations of trilateral solidarity, the prospect of punitive Section 232 tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum — an economic headache that tormented negotiators during a low point in Canada-U.S. relations — is back and looming large.
“One would think that this would have heralded a new era, but in some respects, this is a situation that just continues to roll on and persist,” said consultant Eric Miller, president of the D.C.-based Rideau Potomac Strategy Group.