Obama vows to press for expanded trading

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper (left) and President Barack Obama flank Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto speaking Wednesday at a news conference during the North American Leaders Summit in Toluca, Mexico.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper (left) and President Barack Obama flank Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto speaking Wednesday at a news conference during the North American Leaders Summit in Toluca, Mexico.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

TO LUCA, Mexico - Pressed by North American allies on an array of politically fraught issues, President Barack Obama on Wednesday vowed to press ahead with stalled efforts to expand trade agreements for the Americas into Asia and overhaul fractured U.S. immigration laws.

But Obama made no promises to frustrated Canadian leaders about his long-anticipated decision on the Keystone XL pipeline.

Closing a day of talks with the leaders of Mexico and Canada, Obama said the North American partners must maintain their “competitive advantage” on trade, in part by expanding into the fast-growing Asia-Pacific region. While Obama acknowledged that “elements in my party” oppose the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal, he disputed the notion that Democratic concerns would derail the agreement.

“We’ll get this passed if it’s a good agreement,” Obama declared during a joint news conference with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

The North America Leaders’ Summit coincided with the 20th year of the North American Free Trade Agreement among the three countries, a deal that has vastly expanded cross-border commerce in the region but which remains a contentious issue in the United States over its effect on jobs and on environmental protections.

Trade experts say the agreement is due for an upgrade to take into account the current globalized environment and to address issues not touched in the original pact. But rather than reopen NAFTA, the three countries are instead relying on negotiations underway to complete the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which is a trade bloc of 12 countries in the Americas, Asia and the Pacific.

Pena Nieto heralded the “innovative spirit” that spurred NAFTA and said new trade agreements “are bound to go beyond and enhance all together the progress that each one of our countries has made.” And Harper made clear that he was “focused on bringing those negotiations to a successful conclusion.”

Despite the widespread agreement on trade, there were some sources of tension between the North American partners on immigration and the Keystone XL pipeline.

In Mexico, government officials and the public are eager for progress in overhauling U.S. immigration laws. The prospects for sweeping legislation this year has dimmed in recent weeks, with many House Republicans unwilling to tackle the issue in a midterm election year.

Still, Obama declared: “Immigration reform remains one of my highest priorities.”

For Canada, a source of frustration with the U.S. has been the Obama administration’s long and drawn out review of the Keystone XL pipeline, which would carry oil from tar sands in western Canada 1,179 miles to Nebraska, where existing pipelines would then carry the crude to refineries on the Texas Gulf Coast.

Canada has been pushing the U.S. for years to approve the pipeline, but environmental groups oppose it, and Obama has said he won’t approve it if it increases greenhouse gas emissions.

A Nebraska judge Wednesday struck down a law that allowed the pipeline to proceed through the state, a victory for opponents who have tried to block the project.

While Obama acknowledged that the U.S. review has been “extensive,” he defended the process, saying “these are how we make these decisions about something that could potentially have significant impact on America’s national economy and our national interests.”

A final decision on Keystone isn’t expected until this summer, at the earliest.

Harper, an ardent supporter of the pipeline, said a U.S. State Department review was definitive in determining the pipeline won’t increase emissions.

“My views in favor of the project are very well known,” Harper said.

Front Section, Pages 2 on 02/20/2014