President Donald Trump signed a series of executive actions Wednesday that slap tariffs on virtually all of its trading partners. But two of the U.S.’s most important trading partners, Canada and Mexico, have avoided the sweeping 25% tariff many expected.

At an event in the White House Rose Garden, Trump held up a long list of dozens of countries before an audience, as he announced new tariffs on nations from Cambodia to Serbia. The “reciprocal” tariffs are meant to tariff countries that have existing tariffs for goods from the U.S.

Notably absent from the list were Canada and Mexico, which the White House says will continue to see no tariffs on goods that comply with the USMCA trade agreement between the three countries. That covers the majority of goods imported from Canada and Mexico.

Goods that don’t comply with the trade agreement will continue to be tariffed at the 25% rate Trump put in place last month.

Trump has been threatening a 25% across-the-board tariff on all goods from Canada and Mexico since late last year, unless the two countries do more to crack down on the flow of drugs across the border. The tariff, which Trump signed an executive action to implement shortly after taking office, has now been delayed for months. If it does eventually go into effect, it would hurt Mexico’s export-heavy economy and likely raise prices for consumers in the United States.

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