Prime Minister Mark Carney says it’s “no secret” that U.S. President Donald Trump dislikes the Canada–United States–Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) on free trade, after the president said he would prefer to leave the agreement than renew it.
Carney said he had a number of conversations with the U.S. president at the G7 summit on a “range of issues,” and noted that Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer continue to “work through a number of issues, which are all related.”
“In effect, the underlying structure of CUSMA has been preserved, it continues to operate for 85 percent of our exports. Without any action, it will remain in place for the next decade,” Carney said, citing comments made in recent weeks by Greer.
Carney added that while there is an opportunity to extend the trade deal, there has “always been the opportunity for any of the parties to cancel it with six months notice.”
Canada, the United States, and Mexico are currently in negotiations around a potential renewal of CUSMA before the sixth anniversary of the deal on July 1. Canada and Mexico have said they want a 16-year extension of the deal, but the United States has not made its position public.
The deal, which came into force on July 1, 2020, is currently expected to expire in 2036, but if the three countries choose to renew the deal, it would remain in force until after 2042.
However, if one party does not confirm during the joint review that it wants to extend the deal, it would trigger annual reviews for the rest of the initial 16-year term, until 2036, or until parties decide to renew it.
Trump said he signed CUSMA to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 2018 because there was “no way out of NAFTA, which was the worst trade agreement ever made.”
He said he put a six-year termination clause in the deal when it was first established during his first term, and that Canadian and Mexican officials had “hoped” he wouldn’t be in office to potentially terminate the deal.
“I would prefer not having an agreement, but I’m open to doing it. We'll see what happens,” Trump said.
He said there was “no message” in the lack of a bilateral meeting, and noted that LeBlanc held discussions with Greer at the summit.







