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Canada, Mexico say trilateral deal is key ahead of talks to review USMCA

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MEXICO CITY, March ‌12 (Reuters) - Canadian and Mexican officials on Thursday ​reaffirmed the importance of maintaining the trilateral free trade agreement between ⁠their countries and the U.S., amid signals from Washington it could be interested in bilateral deals.

Canada's ambassador to Mexico ​Cameron MacKay and Mexican deputy trade secretary Luis Rosendo Gutierrez both ‌told a conference in Mexico City that maintaining the trilateral U.S.-Mexico-Canada agreement was a priority for their nations.

The meetings follow ⁠an announcement by U.S. President Donald Trump's ⁠administration on Wednesday of two new trade investigations into alleged forced labor and industrial overcapacity among 16 major trade partners.

The move seeks to restore tariff pressure after a Supreme ‌Court ruling last month struck down significant portions of ⁠the administration's trade program.

Mexico is among ‌the countries that could be targeted ​by the investigation into excess capacity under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, a legal provision that ‌allows the U.S. to investigate foreign ​trade practices deemed unfair.

However, ⁠Mexican Economy Minister Marcelo Ebrard downplayed the potential ‌fallout, saying the bulk of ⁠Mexican trade falls under the USMCA pact and is not subject to Section 301.

The U.S. did not list Canada, the ​United States' second-largest ‌U.S. trade partner after Mexico, as among the countries that ⁠could be subject to investigation.

(Reporting ​by Adriana Barrera and Raul Cortes; Editing by Natalia ​Siniawski and Sarah Morland)

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