Canadian politician suggests expelling Mexico from USMCA

Wednesday, 13 November 2024 12:02:54 (GMT+3)   |   San Diego

The head of the Ontario government, Canada's largest province, Doug Ford, accused Mexico on Tuesday of being the "back door" for Chinese products and suggested expelling that country from the USMCA, according to local and international press reports.

At a press conference, Ford said that if Mexico "does not match the tariffs of Canada and the United States" on Chinese imports, it should not "sit at the table (USMCA) or enjoy access to the largest economy in the world," the news site Infobae reported.

He said that Canada should give priority to the United States and negotiate "a bilateral free trade agreement" between the two countries.

The USMCA will be reviewed by the three countries in 2026. Mexico exported $12.4 billion to Canada, representing 3.5 percent of the total. Mexico imported $8.7 billion from Canada, representing 2.1 percent of the total imported from January to August.


Similar articles

China’s HRC output increases by 4.8 percent in Jan-May

20 Jun | Steel News

US HRC exports down 31.8 percent in April from March

19 Jun | Steel News

Flat steel prices in local Taiwanese market - week 25, 2025

19 Jun | Flats and Slab

European HRC prices decline on weak demand, import interest stays low despite more price cuts

19 Jun | Flats and Slab

Ex-China HDG prices move down on slow demand

19 Jun | Flats and Slab

Turkish CRS spot prices decrease while HRS prices remain stable despite weak demand

19 Jun | Flats and Slab

Major steel and raw material futures prices in China – June 19, 2025 

19 Jun | Longs and Billet

Ex-Brazil HRC prices decline in two weeks

18 Jun | Flats and Slab

Vietnam’s HRC import prices stay in tight range

18 Jun | Flats and Slab

Major steel and raw material futures prices in China – June 18, 2025 

18 Jun | Longs and Billet