Trump, Mexican Leader Celebrate USMCA at White House

Emel Akan
7/8/2020
Updated:
7/8/2020

WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump hosted Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador at the White House for the first time to celebrate the launch of the new North American trade agreement known as USMCA.

The two leaders met on July 8 to discuss the strategic cooperation between the two countries on both trade and immigration.

“The relationship between the United States and Mexico has never been closer than it is right now,” Trump said at the Rose Garden before signing a joint declaration with his counterpart. The declaration aims to bolster economic and security cooperation.

He noted that “people were betting against” a good relationship between the leaders.

“Each of us was elected on the pledge to fight corruption, return power to the people, and put the interests of our countries first,” Trump said.

The U.S.–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA) took effect on July 1, opening a new chapter in North American free trade. Known as T-MEC in Mexico, USMCA has strong labor provisions and promotes investment in the North American supply chain.

Trump called the agreement “the largest, fairest, and most advanced” and said it would “bring countless jobs from overseas back to North America.”

“Our countries will be very big beneficiaries. We are already seeing the fruits because it started,” he said.

The USMCA comes at a crucial time, since it may encourage businesses to bring their production closer to home and advance economic decoupling from China. The pandemic has further accelerated the need to reshore supply lines to the United States, or nearshore to Mexico and Canada, according to experts.

“This agreement is a great option to produce, create jobs, and foster trade without having to go so far away from our homes, cities, states, and nations,” Lopez Obrador said.

He pitched Mexico, saying his country has an “extremely valuable” asset, which is its “very young, creative, and responsible labor force.”

USMCA replaces the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which entered into force under President Bill Clinton in 1994.

The agreement contains new “rules of origin” on cars, which incentivize production in North America. It also promotes the use of high-wage labor, which is expected to make U.S. and Canadian workers more competitive vis-a-vis Mexican workers.

This is the Mexican president’s first foreign visit since he took office in late 2018. The 66-year-old leftist president traveled to Washington on a packed commercial plane, according to a Twitter post, showing him sitting in coach and wearing a face mask.

Before his election in 2018, Lopez Obrador published a book, titled “Listen, Trump,” in which he labeled Trump as “erratic and arrogant.” After he took office, however, the leaders publicly praised each other.

Trump hailed Lopez Obrador for his cooperation in stopping the illicit cross border flow of drugs, guns, cash, and contraband, as well as human trafficking.

“We’re forging critical partnerships across the Western hemisphere to combat the cartels and the smugglers, and to ensure safe, humane, and lawful migration. And we’ve been helped greatly by Mexico,” he said.

Lopez Obrador came under criticism in his country for traveling to Washington before the U.S. election, as some feared he would appear to be supporting Trump in his reelection campaign.

Lopez Obrador said Trump has been “increasingly respectful” to Mexicans, despite the “ideological differences” and “insults” that happened in the past.

He thanked Trump for support during the pandemic and for providing needed critical medical equipment.

“You have not tried to treat us as a colony; on the contrary, you have honored our condition as an independent nation. That’s why I’m here to express to the people of the United States that their president has behaved with us with kindness and respect,” he said, toward the end of his speech.

Before his meeting with Trump, Lopez Obrador laid wreaths at the Abraham Lincoln Memorial and Benito Juárez Statue, “historical figures who symbolize the best of politics and the struggle for liberty in both nations,” according to the Mexican Embassy in Washington.

Emel Akan is a senior White House correspondent for The Epoch Times, where she covers the Biden administration. Prior to this role, she covered the economic policies of the Trump administration. Previously, she worked in the financial sector as an investment banker at JPMorgan. She graduated with a master’s degree in business administration from Georgetown University.
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