Trump And Trudeau Upbeat About Prospects For NAFTA Deal By Friday

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
States and Canada expressed optimism on Wednesday that they could reach new NAFTA deal by a Friday deadline as negotiators prepared to talk
through the night, although Canada warned that a number of tricky issues remained.Under pressure, Canada rejoined the talks to modernize the
24-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement after Mexico and the United States announced a bilateral deal on Monday.Canadian Foreign
Minister Chrystia Freeland said late on Wednesday that talks were at "a very intense moment" but said there was "a lot of good will" between
Canadian and US negotiators."Our officials are meeting now and will be meeting until very late tonight
Possibly they'll be meeting all night long," Freeland said
She and US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer had agreed to review progress early on Thursday.US President Donald Trump has set a Friday
deadline for the three countries to reach an in-principle agreement, which would allow Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto to sign it
before he leaves office at the end of November
Under US law, Trump must wait 90 days before signing the pact.Trump has warned he could try to proceed with a deal with Mexico alone and
levy tariffs on Canadian-made cars if Ottawa does not come on board, although US lawmakers have said ratifying a bilateral deal would not be
easy."They (Canada) want to be part of the deal, and we gave until Friday and I think we're probably on track
We'll see what happens, but in any event, things are working out very well." Trump told reporters at the White House.The upbeat tone
contrasted with Trump's harsh criticism of Canada in recent weeks, railing on Twitter against Canada's high dairy tariffs that he said were
"killing our Agriculture!"Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he thought the Friday deadline could be met."We recognise that there
is a possibility of getting there by Friday, but it is only a possibility, because it will hinge on whether or not there is ultimately a
good deal for Canada," he said at a news conference in northern Ontario on Wednesday
"No NAFTA deal is better than a bad NAFTA deal."Freeland, who is Canada's lead negotiator, was sidelined from the talks for more than two
months, and will be under pressure to accept the terms the United States and Mexico worked out.She declined comment on the issues still in
play, but said on Tuesday that Mexico's concessions on auto rules of origin and labour rights had been a breakthrough.Ottawa is also ready
to make concessions on Canada's protected dairy market in a bid to save a dispute-settlement system, The Globe and Mail reported late on
Tuesday.Sticking PointsOne of the issues for Canada in the revised deal is the US effort to dump the Chapter 19 dispute resolution mechanism
that hinders the United States from pursuing anti-dumping and anti-subsidy cases
US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said on Monday that Mexico had agreed to eliminate the mechanism.To save that mechanism, Ottawa
plans to change one rule that effectively blocked American farmers from exporting ultrafiltered milk, an ingredient in cheesemaking, to
Canada, the Globe and Mail reported, citing sources.Trudeau repeated on Wednesday that he will defend Canada's dairy industry.Earlier on
Wednesday, the Trump administration's own anti-dumping duties on Canadian paper, used in books and newsprint, were thrown out by the US
International Trade Commission.The independent panel ruled that about $1.21 billion in such paper imports from Canada were not harming US
producers.Other hurdles to a NAFTA deal include intellectual property rights and extensions of copyright protections to 75 years from 50, a
higher threshold than Canada has previously supported.Some see the tight time-frame as a challenge."There's nothing here that is not doable
for Canada," said Brian Kingston, vice president for international affairs at The Business Council of Canada."We've got the best negotiators
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