Differing perspectives on TMEC renegotiation

Last week, leaders from Mexico, Canada, and the United States expressed contrasting views on the TMEC renegotiation. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum was optimistic, calling it a review and adjustment to the treaty, while Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney described it as long and difficult, and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer stated that all options are on the table.

Recent statements highlight divergences in stances on the renegotiation of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (TMEC), scheduled for 2026. Sheinbaum stressed her confidence in an adjustment process to strengthen the existing deal. In contrast, Carney warned that negotiations will be prolonged due to existing tariffs under Section 232 of U.S. trade law and the introduction of new issues by the USTR, complicating the agenda. Greer, in closed-door meetings with congressional committees on December 16 and 17, presented a confidential report from the public consultation that included hearings from December 3 to 5 with representatives from 175 organizations across the three countries. Democratic lawmakers, including Ron Wyden, Richard Neal, Elizabeth Warren, Tina Smith, and Ben Ray Luján, demanded the written report by December 30, criticizing its delivery only to the White House.

Greer acknowledged private sector support for TMEC continuity but advocated for changes in labor and human rights, environmental protections, and CFIUS-like mechanisms to review foreign investments, particularly Chinese ones in Mexico and Canada. For Canada, he cited barriers to U.S. dairy products, banking services, and critical minerals. With Mexico, he highlighted over 50 non-tariff barriers delivered by Secretary Marco Rubio, including energy reform, business environment changes, and the Calica case, where the Mexican government seized facilities at Puerto Venado, declaring them a protected area with security implications. He did not rule out options like bilateral agreements and emphasized mechanisms to ensure compliance. Carney announced a meeting between Minister Dominic LeBlanc and Greer in mid-January to start formal discussions.

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The 2026 review of the Mexico, United States, and Canada Agreement (T-MEC) is shaping up as a complex process fraught with uncertainty, according to experts. The event will define commercial certainty for North America, with risks of U.S. protectionism and potential structural changes. Mexico faces challenges in sectors like energy, labor, and migration.

The review of the Mexico-US-Canada Agreement (T-MEC) began this week with technical and preparatory meetings. Mexico's Economy Secretary Marcelo Ebrard will meet US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on Wednesday in Washington D.C. Mexico proposes to keep the deal and remove tariffs.

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Mexico and the United States will launch the first formal bilateral round of talks on March 16 in Washington to review the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (T-MEC), announced by Economy Secretary Marcelo Ebrard on March 5 following agreement with U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer. Discussions will cover rules of origin, industrial integration, supply chain security, and regional competitiveness, as Mexico's private sector expresses optimism.

Mexico's Economy Secretary Marcelo Ebrard urged closing the window of uncertainty over the T-MEC as soon as possible and at the lowest cost, ahead of its 2026 review. At a national meeting, he highlighted the country's favorable trade position and the treaty's survival. He recalled early-year tensions from Donald Trump's tariff threats.

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Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and U.S. President Donald Trump discussed advances in the T-MEC review, bilateral security, narcotrafficking, and trade during a phone call on January 29, 2026. Described as productive and cordial, the conversation—a follow-up to their January 12 talk—saw Trump praise Sheinbaum as a 'wonderful and intelligent leader' amid plans for future meetings.

Mexico's Senate has approved legislation imposing tariffs of up to 50 per cent on more than 1,400 products from Asian countries, primarily targeting Chinese imports to bolster domestic producers. President Claudia Sheinbaum defended the move, stating it supports the 'Plan Mexico' without harming the national economy. Beijing has criticised the duties as damaging to its interests.

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President Donald Trump warned the US Supreme Court that a ruling against his reciprocal tariffs would cause massive financial chaos, following his call with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum. In a Truth Social post, Trump stated that overturning the tariffs would require refunding hundreds of billions of dollars and impact trillions in investments. The Court, skeptical in a November hearing, could annul the measures announced in April 2025.

 

 

 

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