The CUSMA (Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement) contains Article 34.7, a built-in review mechanism that requires all three countries to confirm in writing whether they want to extend the agreement for another 16 years by July 1st, 2026. If all three agree, the deal runs until 2042; if even one party does not confirm, the agreement enters a decade-long cycle of mandatory annual reviews until 2036. This mechanism, designed by US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer during the first Trump administration, gives the United States leverage to demand concessions every 6 years, as Canada and Mexico can never treat CUSMA as permanent. The 30-day deadline Carney set in June 2025 started the public countdown, but the real clock embedded in the legal text was always going to run down to July 1st, 2026.
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Carney Shaved a Month Off the Deal — Trump’s CUSMA Clock Just Started TickingAdded:
On June 16th, 2025, Mark Carney stood at the G7 summit in Canonascis, Alberta on Canadian soil, shook Donald Trump's hand, and made a bet that almost no trade negotiator in modern history has been willing to make. He set a deadline, 30 days to get a deal. He put the timeline in writing. He posted it publicly. And right then, without anybody fully grasping what had just happened, he handed Trump a clock. That clock is still running. And here is where it gets serious. Because that 30-day window Carney set in June 2025 did not produce a deal. It produced a tariff hike. It produced months of stalled talks. It produced a situation right now where the United States has launched formal trade negotiations with Mexico on Kuzma and has not started them with Canada at all. And the hard deadline, the one baked directly into the legal text of the agreement, article 34.7, lands on July 1st, 2026.
That is 35 days from today. If you have been watching the headlines and thinking this is just another round of the same trade drama that has been running since February 2025, stop. What is about to happen on July 1st is structurally different from every tariff threat, every deadline extension, and every missed deal that came before it. This one changes the architecture of North American trade for the next decade. And right now, Canada is the only country at the table that does not have a negotiating seat. Before we continue, thanks for tuning in. Make sure you subscribe and hit like. It genuinely helps this channel keep covering stories that matter. Here is what actually happened at Canonascis and why it set everything that followed in motion. When Carney and Trump met on the sidelines of that G7 summit, the public framing was optimistic. Trump said a deal was achievable. He directed his team to move quickly. The prime minister's office released a joint statement. The two leaders agreed to pursue negotiations toward a deal within the coming 30 days. Carney posted about it himself on social media. Canada's ambassador to the United States, Kirsten Hillman, said she felt a sense of acceleration. But beneath the handshake, the gap was enormous. Former Trudeau Deputy Chief of Staff Brian Clow said at the time that what Trump actually wanted was a residual tariff kept in place on Canadian imports even after any deal.
And Canada was refusing that. Carney had won the April 2025 election specifically on the promise of fighting Trump's tariffs. A deal that locked in permanent levies would have politically eviscerated him at home. The Globe and Mail noted it was rare for a government to put a time limit on itself in negotiations of this magnitude precisely because it removes your flexibility to walk away from a weak deal. So the 30-day window opened and it closed without a deal. The July 21st, 2025 target came and went. Talk stalled in part over Canada's digital services tax, which applied to major American tech platforms. Trump posted publicly about it. Carney's team eventually cancelled the first payment deadline to get talks back on track. The US trade representative Jameson Greer issued conditions that Canada needed to meet.
Changes to dairy rules, beer regulations, digital market access, supply chain alignment. The list kept growing. By July 24th, Canada's top trade negotiators were publicly downplaying the chances of hitting the August 1st deadline. Dominic Leblanc, the minister responsible for Canada US trade, and Ambassador Hillman had spent two days in Washington meeting with Republican senators and Howard Lutnik.
They walked out saying there was a lot of work still ahead. A week later on July 25th, Trump stood outside the White House before flying to Scotland and said, "I think Canada could be one where there's just a tariff, not really a negotiation." August 1st, 2025 arrived, no deal. Trump signed an executive order raising the tariff on Canadian goods from 25% to 35%. Goods compliant with KSMA remained exempt and that exemption is the lifeline that has protected roughly 85 to 90% of Canadian exports throughout this entire trade war. But the signal from Washington was unmistakable. The United States had set a deadline. Canada had not met it and there were consequences. Leblanc standing outside the Canadian embassy in Washington said the deal on the table had not been in Canada's interest. We have always said that we would not accept just any agreement, he told reporters. Canada was still negotiating.
The doors were not closed. But the tariff hike was real and the clock for the much bigger deadline had been running since the moment the deal was never reached. Now, here is the mechanism that makes July 1st, 2026 different from every other date in this story. Kuzma, the Canada, United States, Mexico agreement entered into force on July 1st, 2020. When it was negotiated during the first Trump administration, US Trade Representative Robert Lighheiser insisted on inserting article 34.7, what he described as a paradigm changing mechanism. It created a built-in review after 6 years and a sunset clause that terminates the entire agreement after 16 years unless it is renewed. Here is how the mechanism works. By July 1st, 2026, all three countries, Canada, the United States, and Mexico, must confirm in writing whether they want to extend the agreement for another 16 years. If all three agree, the deal runs until 2042.
and the next review is in 2032. If even one party does not confirm, the agreement does not immediately collapse.
Instead, it enters a decade long cycle of mandatory annual reviews. Every year, the three countries have to sit down and renegotiate. Every year, the uncertainty resets. This runs until the agreement expires completely in 2036. And at any point during those annual reviews, if negotiations break down, the architecture of North American trade simply ends. Article 34.7 was always intended to give Washington leverage.
Lighheiser said so explicitly. It was designed so that Canada and Mexico could never treat Kuzma as permanent. Every 6 years, the United States can walk in and say, "Give us what we want or we start the countdown to expiry." That leverage has never been more relevant than it is right now. The Center for Strategic and International Studies published a detailed analysis of what it called six scenarios for the KSMA review. The cleanest outcome, a full trilateral renewal by July 1st, it described as unlikely. The most likely scenario involves missed deadlines, continued bilateral negotiations, and the agreement entering that annual review cycle, which CSIS called the clock running down rather than resetting.
Scotia Bank economists ran the economic modeling on what a KSMA breakdown would actually mean. Four transmission channels hit simultaneously. collapsing trade volumes, weaker productivity, a confidence shock to investment, and tariff-driven inflation. In their more severe scenario, Canadian export volumes decline by almost 4% in the year following a breakdown. Jobs in export oriented industries are cut first. The losses ripple through domestic demand.
the automotive sector, steel, aluminium, and the tightly integrated manufacturing supply chains that run invisibly across the border every single day. All of it gets repriced overnight. Consider the scale of what is at stake. Trilateral trade in goods and services under KUSA reached over $1.9 trillion in 2024. The KSMA market covers roughly 30% of global GDP. Canada was still the largest single import source for 22 American states in 2025, unchanged from the year before. Almost 90% of Canadian exports to the United States remained tariff-free in 2025 because of those KSMA exemptions. The moment that protection evaporates, those exporters face the full weight of US tariffs on day one. And here is what should worry Canadians most right now.
The United States formally launched Kuzma negotiations with Mexico in March 2026. Greer and Mexican economy minister Marcelo Abraad announced the first round of bilateral discussions focused on reducing non- regional sourcing and tightening rules of origin. Mexico, which had placed tariffs on over 1,400 products targeting Chinese imports and had been working through 52 US trade demands had positioned itself as Washington's preferred negotiating partner. The US and Mexico have a deal track. They have a relationship track.
Canada does not have a formal negotiation underway. Notice reported in May 2026 that the United States has effectively iced Canada out of the major trade pack discussions with less than 2 months until the July 1st trigger point.
The outlet noted it was unclear whether this was a deliberate negotiating tactic by the Trump team or a sign of a deeper fracture that could jeopardize any agreement. On May 26th, 2026, one day ago, Jameson Greer appeared at the Council on Foreign Relations and said something that deserves to be read carefully. He acknowledged that most countries around the world had begrudgingly accepted that tariffs are a permanent feature of Trump's trade policy and had continued negotiating.
Then he said, "Canada's approach has been different." He said, "It is hard to see where that ends." He added that tariffs will remain on Canada and Mexico regardless of any Kosma deal. And he described the ongoing situation as a challenging negotiation for certain sectors. That is the Trump administration's chief trade negotiator the day before the July 1st deadline is 35 days away publicly signaling that Canada has not adopted the posture Washington wants from a negotiating partner. Carnie's position as of late April 2026 was that talks would take some time and that the United States would not be allowed to dictate terms unilaterally. It's not a case of the United States dictates the terms, Leblanc said at a conference in Toronto in April. We have a negotiation. We can come to a mutually successful outcome.
It will take some time. Canada's chief trade negotiator Janice Sheret told the Canadian Chamber of Commerce in April that July 1st should be seen as a checkpoint, not a cliff. She said it does not mean the agreement collapses if negotiations are unresolved by that date. And technically she is right. The cliff is not July 1st. The cliff is annual reviews stretching to 2036 and the possibility that at some point in that decadel long grind, one party decides to stop confirming. That is the real risk. Not a single dramatic expiry date, but a slow motion corrosion of certainty that makes every investment decision, every supply chain contract, and every hiring plan on both sides of the border a bet on whether the deal survives. one more year. Royal Bank Economists put it plainly in their April 2026 analysis of one year of tariff shocks. They noted that Canada was still the largest import source for 22 US states and that maintaining a low tariff rate through KSMA was critical not only for Canada but for US importers.
That last part is the piece Washington seems to be calculating against.
American companies that import Canadian steel, aluminum, auto parts, and energy also get hurt when the exemption disappears. But the Trump administration has consistently shown it is willing to absorb domestic economic pain in pursuit of leverage. Canada's spring 2026 economic update released last month confirmed that the economy grew 1.7% in 2025 and avoided a recession partly because KSMA exemptions protected the bulk of exports. But the update also acknowledged that trade uncertainty remained elevated, that private sector economists expected a complex KSMA review and that the Middle East conflict had added an additional economic shock to an already strained environment.
Exports to the United States remained below pre-tariff levels. Canadian real exports were still roughly 2% below their 2024 level and youth unemployment bore the sharpest edge of the labor market damage. Here is the contradiction at the center of this story that neither Ottawa nor Washington wants to confront directly. Carney's 30-day gamble at Canonascis was not reckless. It was a political calculation. He came into office on the back of a sovereignty mandate. Every Canadian poll in the spring of 2025 showed the public hardened against Trump's annexation rhetoric and against any deal that looked like capitulation. Setting a 30-day deadline was a signal to both Washington and his own electorate. This prime minister is not Justin Trudeau. He is not going to wait indefinitely and he will not accept whatever lands on the table just to claim a deal exists. But that posture, firm, sovereignty first, no bad deal, has a direct cost when the other side's strategy is to use the clock. Article 34.7 was specifically designed by Lighheiser as a tool of American leverage. The annual review mechanism was not a compromise between three equal partners. It was a mechanism to ensure the United States never had to make a permanent concession. Every 6 years the concessions reset. Every year the annual cycle runs. Canada and Mexico pay a premium in investment uncertainty just to stay in place. And right now with 35 days until the mechanism triggers, the United States is negotiating with Mexico and has not started formal talks with Canada. The Bank of Canada's official risk assessment published as part of the KUSMA review process named the 16-year extension as its base case. It is still the base case for most analysts. The consensus view is that the deal eventually gets extended because the economic cost of losing it is too high for all three parties. But the bank also used the phrase limited changes to describe what accompanies that extension, which means concessions are coming. The only question is how many and who pays for them. What Carney is navigating right now is the gap between what Canada can credibly resist and what the United States can credibly demand inside an annual review cycle that gives Washington a fresh trigger every 12 months. Greer has already told Congress that a rubber stamp renewal is not in the American national interest. He has already proposed layering separate bilateral protocols on top of the core agreement, essentially splitting the trilateral deal into three overlapping bilaterals with the United States holding the center. The architecture Lighheiser built is working exactly as designed. The 30-day window Carney opened in June 2025 started the public countdown. But the real clock, the one embedded in the legal text of the agreement itself, was always going to run down to July 1st, 2026.
The G7 meeting, the August tariff hike, the iced out negotiations, the Greer comment yesterday, these are not separate events. They are the same story moving in one direction. July 1st is not the end, but it is the last point at which the clock can be stopped without cost. After that, it just keeps ticking.
Share this with anyone trying to understand where the Canada US relationship is actually heading right now. The tariff numbers are real. The KOSMA exemption that has been protecting Canadian exports is not guaranteed past this summer. And the man across the table has already said he is not writing Canada a deal on the terms Canada is asking for. Thanks for watching. Join the discussion below. Do you think Carney should hold firm or has the moment to make a deal already passed?
Let me know. Subscribe and like the video if you want to stay on top of where this goes
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