Mexico pushes to extend USMCA after Trump says he’d ‘rather have it terminated’

ONP Summary
The Trump administration announced on July 1 that it will not extend the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement under its existing terms, activating a review process that keeps the pact in effect until 2036. Rather than committing to a longer renewal period as Canada and Mexico had sought, the administration has chosen annual reviews as part of ongoing negotiations aimed at increasing manufacturing activity in the United States. This decision opens a 10-year window during which the three countries must either rework the agreement or see it expire.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasize Trump's break from his own signature trade deal and frame the shift to annual reviews as destabilizing, creating near-term uncertainty rather than enabling substantive renegotiation of the agreement.
Moderate: Moderate outlets present the move within the context of the sunset clause mechanism and focus on the divergence in renewal preferences—with Canada and Mexico seeking a 16-year extension while the Trump administration insists on annual reviews as part of its renegotiation strategy.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets portray Trump's refusal to renew as a decisive negotiating tactic, emphasizing his willingness to use the threat of expiration to extract concessions and shift more manufacturing activity to the United States.
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Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said Mexico has signed a 16-year extension of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade pact, adding that Canada has also completed the required step and is awaiting a response from the United States.
Top trade officials from all three countries are set to meet July 1 to decide the agreement’s future.
If no extension...