U.S. trade czar Robert Lighthizer says he will work with Democrats to do whatever it takes to ratify the new North American free trade deal.
Lighthizer made the pledge in testimony today before the U.S. Senate finance committee as part of the Trump administration’s push to get the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement ratified by a divided Congress.
Lighthizer’s appearance on Capitol Hill comes two days before Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House to give impetus towards ratifying the deal.
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Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, the ranking Democrat on the committee, says the new deal has “weak enforcement” provisions on raising labour standards in Mexico that he and his party want to fix.
WATCH: Pence, Trudeau defend new NAFTA negotiations
Lighthizer says USMCA has stronger enforcement provisions than the old North American Free Trade Agreement, including improved labour rights in Mexico, but he’s open to making it stronger.
Lighthizer says he has had good discussions with Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and suggests that getting a ratification bill introduced in the lower house of Congress – a necessary first step towards U.S. ratification of the pact – might be weeks away.
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