The leaders of Canada, Mexico and the United States met Tuesday in Mexico City for a summit and said they have made the regional partnership stronger after two days of meetings.
During the North American Leaders’ Summit, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Mexican President Andrés Manuel Lopez Obrador and U.S. President Joe Biden agreed to strengthen economic ties, including making more goods in the region and ramping up semiconductor production.
Biden said at a news conference after a roughly two-hour meeting at Mexico’s National Palace that the three countries “are true partners.”
“We are stronger and better when we work together, the three of us, and together we made enormous progress since our last summit from fighting COVID-19 and strengthening our ability to address public health threats to investing in and building a 21st century workforce,” Biden said.
They also discussed combating climate change, migration and the movement of drugs and people along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Mexico will help the U.S. fight the trade in the synthetic opioid fentanyl, Lopez Obrador said, which has led to the deaths of thousands of Americans. And he urged Biden to push the U.S. Congress for immigration reform and to help fix the status of millions of Mexicans without documentation in the United States.
Migration was one of the most talked-about issues at the summit, the Mexican president said.
The three leaders reaffirmed a commitment they adopted six months ago in the Los Angeles Declaration on Migration and Protection, which includes the expansion of legal migration pathways, a range of collaborative measures and better communication, both among one another and with their respective publics.
“And the reason why this summit, this trilateral relationship, is so impactful is because we share a common vision for the future grounded on common values,” Biden said.
The main outcomes from the summit are better communication among the three nations, the goal to make North America stronger in energy and an understanding that they need to manage the increasing number of migrants coming to the U.S.-Mexico border while dealing with issues still arising from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Although there were complex and important conversations, experts are not surprised there was not any one major announcement.