Canada has formally requested a 16-year renewal of the North American Free Trade Agreement, a move that comes as the United Kingdom accelerates its search for independent trade deals post-Brexit. The stark divergence in strategy underscores the global uncertainty gripping workers and industries reliant on cross-border commerce.
Canadian Trade Minister Mary Ng confirmed the request in a statement on Wednesday, calling for a “stable and predictable” framework that would lock in tariff-free access across North America for nearly two decades. Sources close to the negotiations say Ottawa is pushing for stronger protections on automotive manufacturing and agricultural supply management, two sectors that have faced chronic pressure from cheap imports and labour disputes.
For working families in Windsor, Ontario, where auto plants employ thousands, the prospect of a renewal brings cautious relief. “We’ve seen plants close and jobs go south,” said union representative Tom Daniels. “A 16-year deal might stop the race to the bottom, but only if labour standards are written in stone.” The current NAFTA, renegotiated in 2020 as the USMCA, includes provisions on wages and regional content that have helped stem job losses, but critics argue enforcement has been weak.
Meanwhile, the UK government this week published a new trade strategy aimed at forging bilateral agreements with India, the Gulf states, and the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership. Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds stressed that “global Britain” would not rely on a single bloc. “We are looking at the Commonwealth, at Asia, at the Americas,” he said. “We need flexibility, not a 16-year commitment.”
Yet for workers in Sunderland, where exports to Europe have fallen since Brexit, the allure of far-flung deals rings hollow. “My plant makes car parts for the continent,” said factory worker Sarah Hargreaves. “They keep talking about Japan, but my bills are due now.” Economist James Meadway warned that the UK’s pivot risked deepening regional inequality: “Without a stable anchor like NAFTA, the North of England will struggle to attract investment. We need certainty, not a scattergun approach.”
The contrast is sharp. Canada, buffeted by US protectionism under both Trump and Biden, wants a long-term guarantee. The UK, freed from EU rules, seeks agility. Both face the same reality: wage stagnation, soaring living costs, and a workforce that has little patience for abstract trade talk. The Bank of England reports that real wages are still 2% below their 2021 peak, while in Canada, food inflation has outpaced income growth for three consecutive quarters.
Unions on both sides of the Atlantic are watching closely. Unite the Union’s Sharon Graham said the UK government had “sacrificed workers’ pay packets on the altar of free trade” and called for mandatory labour clauses in any deal. The Canadian Labour Congress echoed that, demanding a “workers’ chapter” in the NAFTA renewal that would allow cross-border strikes against firms that flout standards.
As the negotiations unfold, the question remains: will these trade pivots protect the kitchen table economy, or will they simply rewrite the rules for corporate gain? The workers in the rusty towns of Canada’s industrial belt and Britain’s northern post-industrial cities are waiting for an answer.









