Hartford Courant

US, Mexico restart talks on shared interests

- By Aamer Madhani

WASHINGTON — The United States and Mexico restarted high-level economic talks Thursday after a four-year pause as top advisers to presidents Joe Biden and Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador expressed eagerness to make headway on issues important to both nations, such as infrastruc­ture, trade and migration.

The talks were launched by Biden in 2013 when he was vice president under Barack Obama but were halted under President Donald Trump, whose hard-line immigratio­n policies complicate­d the United States’ relationsh­ip with its top trade partner.

Vice President Kamala Harris opened Thursday’s meeting with brief remarks in which she sought to emphasize the Biden administra­tion’s desire for warmer relations, referring to the Mexican delegation as “our friends, our partners.” She also stressed the importance of improving relations in a moment when dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, cyber threats and supply chain disruption­s are high priorities for both nations.

“We are very excited about this next stage of the relationsh­ip and partnershi­p between the United States and Mexico,” said Harris, who visited Mexico City in June for talks with Lopez Obrador. “Mexico is our closest neighbor and a strategic partner and one of our most important economic relationsh­ips. Mexico’s economic stability is in the interest of the United States.”

Before the meeting, Lopez Obrador said his advisers would press the Biden administra­tion to offer temporary works visas to Central Americans, a move the Mexican government says could help slow the flow of migrants illegally attempting to travel to the United States and help alleviate an American labor shortage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States