Tariff negotiations lack clarity, frustrating Mexico and Canada
7/3/2025 6:22
M exican and Canadian officials are increasingly frustrated by
tariff negotiations with the Trump administration, with a lack
of clarity over exactly what the U.S. wants making any
resolution seem impossible, sources from both countries told
Reuters.
After implementing across-the-board 25% tariffs on goods from
Canada and Mexico earlier this week, President Donald Trump on
Thursday announced a one-month reprieve for both countries on
goods compliant under a North American trade pact.
The on-again, off-again tariffs and the high-level
discussions surrounding them have exasperated negotiating teams,
according to three Mexican officials and two Canadian sources
familiar with negotiations.
It's like "dealing with an angry partner and you don’t know
what they're mad about," one Mexican official. "It's not clear
what they want."
The press person for Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum
responded to a request for comment by directing Reuters to
Sheinbaum's public comment on Thursday. In a post on X,
Sheinbaum said: "We had an excellent and respectful call," that
respected the "sovereignties" of both countries.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's office and the
White House both did not immediately respond to requests for
comment.
Trump based the legal justification for the tariffs on combating
fentanyl and illegal immigration, but he and others in his
administration often expand the justification to include trade
deficits and protecting U.S. industries like autos and lumber.
Despite the shared frustration of Mexico and Canada, the two
countries have taken distinct tones in public. Sheinbaum has
stressed her respect for Trump and the close cooperation with
the U.S. Canada has bluntly criticized the chaos.
Trudeau on Thursday, before Trump announced a reprieve, said
Canada will be in a trade war with the United States for "the
foreseeable future." U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent
called Trudeau "a numbskull."
Trudeau's foreign minister has been even franker.
"We won't get through this, another psychodrama every 30 days,"
Foreign Minister Melanie Joly told business leaders in Toronto
earlier this week.
"The problem we've had is it's not clear what the American
president wants," she added. "I've had conversations with
colleagues in Washington saying, 'Okay, but at the end of the
day, what do you guys want?' And I got the answer, 'We're about
to know.' There's one decision maker in the system. He's the
only one to know."
U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick dismissed the idea
that he didn't know what Trump wants as "fake news" and "so
silly" in an interview on Thursday with CNBC.
Trump "calls everybody all the time," Lutnick said. "I speak
to him all the time. You've got to be kidding me. The president
knows exactly what he wants. We know exactly what he wants."
But Canadian and Mexican officials said the lack of clarity
over demands as well as uncertainty over whether Trump
administration officials in bilateral meetings were actually
able to deliver on what they said was making discussions
incredibly challenging.
The scope of negotiations is not clear, they said, with
talks sometimes seeming to be focused on fentanyl and at other
times on migration, while on some occasions the focus seemed to
be trade deficits.
"The U.S. reasons for the tariffs constantly shift,” said
another Mexican official. "If we can't identify the problem, we
can't identify the solution."
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