Labor Rights and the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA)

The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) has the strongest and most far-reaching labor provisions of any trade agreement. The agreement contains a labor chapter that prioritizes labor obligations by including them in the core of the agreement and making them fully enforceable. This is a major change from NAFTA, which only contained a side agreement on labor, and it will dramatically benefit American workers and businesses.

Complementing the USMCA's cutting-edge labor provisions, the agreement also contains a groundbreaking enforcement provision. The Rapid Response Labor Mechanism is the first of its kind and allows the United States to take enforcement actions against individual factories if they fail to comply with domestic freedom of association and collective bargaining laws.

The USMCA implementing legislation includes $210 million to ILAB for USMCA-implementation activities: $180 million over four years for USMCA-related technical assistance projects and $30 million over eight years for the capacity of ILAB to monitor USMCA compliance, including the necessary expenses of additional full-time ILAB employees for the Interagency Committee and labor attachés in Mexico.

Success Stories

Alejandra Morales, secretary general of SINTTIA, an independent union at the GM Silao plant in Mexico, celebrates a union election with her fellow workers. Photo by Solidarity Center.

Transparency and Accountability for Mexico’s Unions

Read how the government of Mexico is making public millions of union documents to promote union democracy.

Workers gather outside Casa Obrera Potosina. Photo by Solidarity Center.

A Place in Mexico for Workers to Gather and Promote Their Rights

ILAB-funded Solidarity Center project established a worker center in Mexico to help ensure worker voice is truly heard.

Requirements

Among its provisions, the USMCA Labor Chapter: