Politics British Columbia

Mexican foreign minister says trilateral trade talks will happen when ‘appropriate’

OTTAWA — Mexico’s Foreign Affairs Minister Roberto Velasco Alvarez says his government will engage in trilateral talks with the U.S. and Canada on the continental trade pact when “it’s appropriate.” The Trump administra…

Mexican foreign minister says trilateral trade talks will happen when ‘appropriate’
Text to audio Audio version available

OTTAWA — Mexico’s Foreign Affairs Minister Roberto Velasco Alvarez says his government will engage in trilateral talks with the U.S. and Canada on the continental trade pact when “it’s appropriate.” The Trump administration opted not to renew the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade, better known as CUSMA, at the start of July. That triggered rolling annual [...]

Elevate your local knowledge Sign up for the iNFOnews newsletter today! Elevate your local knowledge Sign up for the iNFOnews newsletter today! Select Region Selecting your primary region ensures you get the stories that matter to you first.

OTTAWA — Mexico’s Foreign Affairs Minister Roberto Velasco Alvarez says his government will engage in trilateral talks with the U.S. and Canada on the continental trade pact when “it’s appropriate.” The Trump administration opted not to renew the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade, better known as CUSMA, at the start of July. That triggered rolling annual reviews for up to a decade, at which point the agreement will expire if the partners can’t agree on an extension.

Mexico and the U.S. are set to hold their third round of official negotiations next week, but Ottawa and the Trump administration have not started similar talks. Speaking in Ottawa alongside Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand today, Alvarez says all three countries agree CUSMA should remain a trilateral agreement. Anand says the trade and investment relationship with both Mexico and the United States is important.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 17, 2026. — By Kelly Geraldine Malone in Washington, with files from Dylan Robertson in Ottawa News from © The Canadian Press, .

Published
Jul 17, 2026
Updated
Jul 17, 2026
Source
Infonews.ca
Category
Politics
Read time
1 min
Key facts

Key facts

SectionPolitics
Open
SourceInfonews.ca
Open
PublishedJul 17, 2026
UpdatedJul 17, 2026

Why this matters locally

This politics story matters locally because it may affect readers, businesses, commuters, families, or public services in British Columbia.

Local impact

BC Post links this item to British Columbia coverage so readers can follow related city updates, weather, traffic, events, and category news in one place.

Timeline

PublishedJul 17, 2026, 10:45 AMThis story was published by BC Post.
ImportedJul 17, 2026, 12:00 PMThe item entered the BC Post source pipeline.
Transparency

Source and credit

BC Post may summarize, organize, and add local context for reader clarity. Original reporting remains with the listed publisher.

Infonews.ca Published Jul 17, 2026 Imported Jul 17, 2026
Read Original Source
Infonews.ca Jul 17, 2026
Read Original Source