German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she’s ready to defend the interests of European Union members in Brexit negotiations and doesn’t see any reason for the process to be delayed by the results of the U.K.’s election. “We will try to defend the interests of our 27 members states, and Great Britain will defend its own interests,” Merkel said in Mexico City on Friday after meeting with President Enrique Pena Nieto. “At this moment I don’t see any obstacle for us carrying out the negotiations as they have been planned,” she later added. U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May’s stunning electoral setback with a hung parliament on Thursday left her Brexit strategy in shambles less than two weeks before the start of talks. Both the ruling Conservative Party and the opposition Labour Party fell short of an overall majority, setting leadership adrift. Read more: What’s Next as Britain Faces Hung Parliament: QuickTake Q&A The EU and U.K. were already racing against the clock with an agreement needed by the end of 2018 so that their parliaments can rubber-stamp it. The two sides are also at odds over multiple matters ranging from how the talks will be structured to whether the U.K. should pay an exit fee, and there’s the issue of finding common ground on a complicated trade accord. Global Concerns Merkel has been on a tour to rally support among Group of 20 nations ahead of a July 7-8 summit in Hamburg and visited Argentina before heading to Mexico on her Latin America trip. Merkel and Pena Nieto reiterated their goal for updating the EU-Mexico free-trade agreement, which went into effect in 2000, by the end of this year. Mexico is looking to diversify its trade to make itself less dependent on the U.S. after Donald Trump threatened to withdraw from the North American Free Trade Agreement that also includes Canada. Echoing the kind of trade negotiation that Pena Nieto’s government says it wants in negotiating with the U.S. to modernize Nafta, Merkel said the revised Mexico-EU deal can be “a classical situation where everyone wins.” Merkel said she sees Nafta talks, set to begin as soon as mid August, as a positive and a process that German companies are watching closely. In response to reporters’ questions, Merkel said she’s concerned both about Venezuela and the situation with Qatar. A group of Gulf nations led by Saudi Arabia severed diplomatic ties as well as land, sea and air travel with Qatar on June 5, accusing the country of supporting Sunni extremist groups and Iranian-backed Shiite militants to destabilize the region. Qatar has denied it backs terrorists and accuses the Saudis of seeking to dominate their smaller neighbors.