President Trump said Saturday that he intends to use his
executive authority to withdraw from the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Speaking to reporters on Air Force One, Trump said that he will soon notify
Canada and Mexico of the United States intent
to leave the trade pact.
“I’ll be terminating it within a relatively short period of
time. We get rid of NAFTA. It’s been a disaster for the United States,” Trump
said, adding, “And so Congress will have a choice of the USMCA or
pre-NAFTA, which worked very well.”
The Trump Administration has negotiated a new agreement, which
the US refers to as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), that is
intended to replace NAFTA. NAFTA is the world's
largest free trade agreement and has led to dramatic economic growth in all
three nations.
Trump’s intention is obviously to give Congress the choice
of either the new deal or no free trade agreement at all. NAFTA reduced tariffs
among the three nations so destroying the pact would have the effect of raising
tariffs even further and slowing trade. Already, American agriculture, small manufacturing, and shipping have
been damaged by the trade war.
The new trade pact, which is also referred to as the “New NAFTA,”
has received mixed reviews. On the plus side, the
deal contains increased protections for intellectual property, agrees to
prevent currency manipulation, and opens American access to Canadian dairy
markets. On the downside, the treaty automatically
expires
in 16 years unless it is renewed and, in an apparent attempt to limit US
investment in Mexico, the Trump Administration insisted on limiting protection
from regulatory abuse. Further, the new deal increases
the percentage of domestic content required to exempt new cars from tariffs.
Rather than free trade, the Wall Street Journal
says of the USMCA, “This is politically
managed trade, and its economic logic is the opposite of Mr. Trump’s domestic
deregulation agenda.” The paper’s editorial board added that the “auto gambit
is part of the Trump-Lighthizer strategy to blow up global supply chains.”
The main attraction of the Trump trade pact is that it is better
than a reversion to pre-NAFTA rules with their return to increased tariffs and
regulations. Economists
say that the new deal won’t boost economic growth or increase manufacturing
jobs. Its new limitations on free trade will end up costing American consumers
more money while giving them less choice.
There is also debate on whether President Trump has the
authority to unilaterally withdraw from NAFTA. The treaty includes a provision
that allows for withdrawal after a six-month notice, but opponents say that
since NAFTA was approved by the Senate, leaving the pact would also require
Senate approval.
A 2016 report by the Congressional
Research Service addressed the question of a unilateral withdrawal from
NAFTA by the president. “As a practical matter, the President’s communication
of a notice of termination of an FTA [free trade agreement] to trade partners
in accordance with the FTA’s terms59 appears sufficient to release the United
States from its international obligations,” the report says, but notes, the “President could not repeal
federal statutes implementing the FTA in the absence of congressional action
because the Constitution gives Congress the authority to impose duties and to ‘regulate
commerce with foreign nations.’” In other words, the president’s notice to
terminate could be a withdrawal in name only if Congress does not change the US
laws and regulations to differ from what the treaty requires.
The report also points out that “the Constitution apportions
authority over international trade between the President and Congress.” The legality
of Trump’s move is not specifically addressed in the Constitution and there is
no precedent for a president unilaterally withdrawing from a trade treaty.
If President Trump goes through with his move to unilaterally
claim the executive authority to withdraw the United States from a successful
trade deal with its two largest trading partners, it will almost certainly provoke
a constitutional crisis as well as an economic one. The Senate is controlled by
Republicans but many oppose the president’s protectionist trade policies.
Republican Senate leaders may be forced to sue to overturn the president’s
abuse of executive authority or choose between either a badly flawed trade deal
or no deal at all.
Originally published
on The
Resurgent
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