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Trudeau better not pull a ‘Judas’ and backstab Mexico on NAFTA: ex-president Vicente Fox

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Does Canada need to diversify its trading partnerships?
WATCH: Does Canada need to diversify its trading partnerships? – Nov 7, 2017

MEXICO CITY – A former president of Mexico has a warning for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau: Don’t abandon our country in NAFTA talks like some modern-day “Judas.”

Vicente Fox warns that would be a mistake.

The former Mexican president told CTV News that it wouldn’t do any good if Canada ditched Mexico in pursuit of a one-on-one trade deal with the U.S., in the misguided belief President Donald Trump would go easier on Canada.

READ MORE: Canada gives U.S. an auto industry explainer during NAFTA talks

Fox made his case using a biblical metaphor – urging Prime Minister Justin Trudeau not to behave like the apostle who sold out Jesus Christ.

“He might, like Judas, give us a strike and go with the United States and leave us aside,” Fox told the network, in an interview airing Sunday night.

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“I warn Trudeau, and I warn Canada, you will not make it (better without Mexico).”

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WATCH: Trans-Pacific Partnership a backup plan if NAFTA fails

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Trans-Pacific Partnership: a backup plan if NAFTA fails

The Canadian government has repeatedly said it’s committed to working trilaterally to renew NAFTA as a three-country agreement. However, the Canadians have also raised eyebrows in Mexico by occasionally making more ambiguous comments: some Canadian officials have at times suggested they’re open to both bilateral or trilateral deals.

Trump says he could do one or the other.

READ MORE: ‘No fireworks’ at NAFTA talks in Mexico City, but little sign of headway

Former prime minister Stephen Harper, in a memo earlier this year to associates obtained by The Canadian Press, appeared to favour the one-on-one approach. Harper suggested Trump had few trade complaints about Canada, and he said some Americans found it mystifying that the Canadian government remains so attached to a trilateral deal with Mexico.

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Proponents of the three-country approach say it makes sense for several reasons: the continent has integrated supply chains for products like autos, some of the strongest defenders of trade in U.S. politics are from southern Mexican border states, and, they say, there’s no guarantee anyway that Trump would go soft in a separate negotiation with Canada.

WATCH: Is Canada being too nice with NAFTA?

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Is Canada being too nice with NAFTA?

In the CTV interview, Fox also did what he has done repeatedly over the last two years: Blast Trump. Using a few four-letter profanities, the former Mexican president called Trump a destroyer, pitting America against the world.

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