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Trudeau said the 24-year-old pact has been good for both Canada and the U.S. and a reworked deal could still be reached. “Cancelling it would be extremely harmful and disruptive to people in the United States,” Trudeau said.

“We are going to keep negotiating in good faith,” he added. “We are confident we are going to be able to get to the right deal for Canada, not just any deal.”

Growing Tension

While Trump said last year he was seeking to just tweak trade ties with Canada — and Mexico looked like the main target of a revamp — the positions have shifted. Growing tensions were evident at the close of round-six of NAFTA talks this week in Montreal when U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer lashed out at Canada for filing a sweeping trade case against America at the World Trade Organization in January.

We are confident we are going to be able to get to the right deal for Canada, not just any deal Justin Trudeau

Lighthizer also revived a debate between the two countries over trade-gap statistics and called Canada’s ideas for new auto-content requirements in NAFTA as too vague and rowing in the opposite direction of the U.S.’s needs.

Trudeau’s comments on Friday could ratchet up pressures and remind the U.S. that Canada — America’s largest export market — is thinking about life after NAFTA if the negotiations collapse.

The Canadian dollar fell as much as 1.4 per cent against the greenback shortly after Trudeau’s comments and traded 1.3 per cent weaker at $1.2423 at 4:34 p.m. in Toronto. It is up 1.2 per cent against the U.S. dollar this year.

“We don’t view the Trudeau comments as anything more than him stating that Canada wouldn’t sign just any deal,” said Bipan Rai, a Toronto-based foreign-exchange and macro strategist at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. “There is still a strong willingness on the Canadian side to get a deal done, but not one that would hurt domestic prospects.”

Bloomberg.com