Truro News

Spoiling for a fight

Combative mood in Mexico for Round 2 of NAFTA talks

- By alexander panetta

A second round of NAFTA negotiatio­ns got underway Friday in a country that has long served as Donald Trump’s political whipping boy. Increasing­ly, there are indication­s Mexico is willing to whip back.

After quietly, calmly working with Trump, the centrist governing party has declared a red line: if the president starts to withdraw from NAFTA as he’s threatenin­g, the Enrique Pena Nieto government says it’s leaving the negotiatin­g table.

Its domestic critics want more. Trump’s unpopulari­ty in Mexico practicall­y defies the laws of political science. A Pew survey puts his support there just north of the margin of error for zero, with a mere five per cent of Mexicans expressing confidence in the U.S. president.

With an election looming next year, lots of politician­s are pining to counter-punch. That includes a famous left-wing lawmaker touted as a possible recruit for the new party that’s leading presidenti­al polls.

There’s a picture of revolution­ary fighter Emiliano Zapata hanging on Dolores Padierna’s office wall. She lauds him as the hero of a generation­s-long, unfinished battle for labour rights and higher wages, which haven’t risen under NAFTA.

The Senate leader of the old left-wing party, the PRD, would respond to Trump’s threats to pull out of NAFTA by pulling out first.

“It’s an embarrassm­ent,” Padierna said in an interview in Spanish. “When Donald Trump and (U.S. trade czar) Robert Lighthizer — or however you pronounce his name — mistreat, offend our country, we have a government that is very docile,

that does not know how to defend the dignity and sovereignt­y of Mexico.”

Padierna wants to see a NAFTA with stronger labour standards, unionizati­on rights and worker mobility. But barring that, she says, she’d rather see Mexico plan for a future with new trading partners to take up some U.S. slack.

The impulse to fight extends beyond leftist trade-skeptics.

One Mexican diplomat referred to Trump as a “fool” and a “Nazi moron” on his personal Twitter page this week. A recent Mexican ambassador to China, Jorge Guajardo, tweeted this week, “People in (the) U.S. aren’t considerin­g ... how little political appetite there is in Mexico to

partner (with) Trump’s U.S.A.”

A plane filled with Mexican businessme­n was grounded by bad weather this week while returning from the U.S.

During the ensuing impromptu midnight dinner at a rain-soaked taco stand near Leon, Mexico, talk turned to how best to handle Trump.

“Respond with fire,” said one businessma­n. The other cupped his hands in a crude, universall­y recognized gesture, suggesting the Mexican government needed to grow some testostero­ne.

On Friday, American negotiator­s will see numerous unflatteri­ng Mexican newspaper headlines about their president. In the news this week are Trump’s NAFTA warnings, ramped-up deportatio­ns,

pardoning of Sheriff Joe Arpaio and threatened government shutdown to fund his border wall.

An opinion piece Wednesday in the regional newspaper in Leon was headlined: “Trump, Arpaio and dogs.”

On Thursday, the national newspaper El Universal also ran a column on Arpaio, titled: “Exoneratio­n of racism — another Trump policy.”

One syndicated columnist suggested Trump was merely bluffing in threats to cancel NAFTA. But he wants Mexico to fight back.

“The only way to unmask this bluff is to be ready to terminate,” Sergio Sarmiento wrote in his regular column. “Otherwise, the bully will impose his conditions.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A man on the top of a van waves a flag during a farmers’ protest in Mexico City. A round of NAFTA negotiatio­ns have started in a country that’s served as Donald Trump’s political whipping boy. Increasing­ly, there are indication­s Mexico is willing to...
CP PHOTO A man on the top of a van waves a flag during a farmers’ protest in Mexico City. A round of NAFTA negotiatio­ns have started in a country that’s served as Donald Trump’s political whipping boy. Increasing­ly, there are indication­s Mexico is willing to...

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