Trump impeachment inquiry could kill the USMCA

President Trump raised concerns that Congress may not approve the new North American Free Trade Agreement, now that the House has launched an impeachment inquiry.

“I don’t know if Nancy Pelosi is going to have any time to sign [the USMCA] — that’s the only problem,” said President Trump on Wednesday. He went on to say Pelosi is wasting time with a “manufactured crisis.”

Approving the new deal — known as the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) — before the end of the year has been one of the administration’s top priorities.

“If it happens, it happens. Otherwise, when we take over the House next year we’ll do it our way,” said Trump.

In a statement on Tuesday, the White House said Democratic lawmakers have “destroyed any chances” of legislative progress with the impeachment inquiry.

“They need to have an internal discussion at the White House about how they want to play it. Do you to want keep working with the Democrats or are you so mad that you don't want to work with them on anything? And I don't know if they decided that yet,” said Simon Lester, trade expert with the Cato Institute.

In contrast to Trump, Lighthizer appears to more optimistic about the deal’s chances.

“If it did not pass, it would be a catastrophe for our economy,” Lighthizer told reporters on Wednesday.

Lighthizer said he’s confident the agreement will make it through Congress, despite the inquiry, because he believes it’s a good deal.

"It's not all about politics in Washington. On the merits, this is demonstrably good for the people of the United States,” said Lighthizer, according to the White House press pool report.

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer leaves after a meeting with Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., May 15, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

A group of Democratic lawmakers has been working with Lighthizer for months, attempting to make changes to several areas of the deal — including environmental standards, labor standards, pharmaceuticals and enforcement. Democratic lawmakers insist they can still work on the trade deal, while investigating President Trump.

“The work continues between the administration and the leadership with the House. There’s still progress going on,” said Rep. Dan Kildee (D-MI) in an interview with Yahoo Finance. “To be fair, there are some good people in the federal government — people like Ambassador Lighthizer, who is the person with whom we're working on this — that want to get this done, is acting in good faith.”

Kildee said he’s not sure if Democratic negotiators and Lighthizer will eventually come up with an agreement that he could support, but the impeachment inquiry won’t stop them from trying.

“I don't think it's necessarily the end of USMCA. I think USMCA has bigger problems, unfortunately, than this [impeachment] and it's actually getting the language right,” said Kildee, who serves on the House Ways & Means committee.