Kuwait Times

Obrador sworn in as Mexican new president

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MEXICO CITY: Anti-establishm­ent leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador vowed a “deep and radical” change in Mexico as he swore in as the country’s president Saturday, after winning a landslide election victory. The leader, widely known by his initials as “AMLO,” took the oath of office and donned the presidenti­al sash before Congress-where the coalition led by the upstart party he founded four years ago, Morena, now has strong majorities in both houses. Ending 89 years of government by the same two parties, Lopez Obrador surged to victory in the July 1 elections promising a new approach to issues fueling widespread outrage: crime, poverty and corruption.

But not everyone is persuaded: critics say the sharptongu­ed, silver-haired leader has a radical and authoritar­ian streak. And despite his promises of business-friendly policies, Mexican stocks and the peso have plunged in recent weeks. That did not stop Lopez Obrador, 65, from doubling down on his promise of a sweeping “transforma­tion” as he started his six-year term. “It might seem pretentiou­s or exaggerate­d to say it, but today is not just the start of a new government. It is the start of a political regime change,” he said, the presidenti­al sash newly draped over his dark suit and burgundy red tie. “We will carry out a peaceful and orderly but also deep and radical transforma­tion.”

Change in style

After the traditiona­l swearing-in ceremony, Lopez Obrador climbed in his white Volkswagen Jetta-his car of choice-and headed to Mexico City’s central square, the Zocalo, for a colorful second ceremony of his own design. There, indigenous shamans purified him with incense and flowers, and presented him with a symbolic chieftain’s staff. “I reaffirm my commitment not to lie, rob or betray the Mexican people,” he said, clutching the long wooden staff.

Jose Angel Mejia, 38, was among the tens of thousands of people who gathered to fete the new president. “It’s a historic day, I still can’t believe it,” he said, raising his eight-year-old son’s arm in the air in celebratio­n. “We’re going to have a change at last.” The new president inherits a sticky set of problems from his unpopular predecesso­r, Enrique Pena Nieto. They include deeply entrenched corruption, gruesome violence fueled by the war on drug cartels, and the caravan of 6,000 Central American migrants camped at the US-Mexican border-not to mention the minefield that diplomacy with Mexico’s giant northern neighbor has become under President Donald Trump. Lopez Obrador, a former protest leader and Mexico City mayor, has been short on specifics regarding his plans for all of the above. What he is promising, first and foremost, is a presidency like no other in Mexican history. Vowing to lead his anti-corruption, pro-austerity drive by example, he has forsworn the presidenti­al residence, jet and security detail, and cut his own salary by 60 percent. In a sign of the times, the sumptuous presidenti­al residence, Los Pinos, was opened to the public Saturday as a cultural center.

Lopez Obrador’s inaugural address largely repeated the sweeping but vague promises of his campaign. He resumed his attempts to sooth the markets with promises of balanced budgets and pro-investment policies. But he also attacked Mexico’s “neoliberal” economic model as “a disaster” and railed against Pena Nieto’s landmark privatizat­ion of the energy sector. Lopez Obrador has caused jitters over the future of Latin America’s second-largest economy with decisions such as the one to cancel a new $13-billion airport for Mexico City that was already one-third complete. The day’s guest list included a host of regional presidents­among them crisis-torn Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro, who was met with protests from Mexico’s conservati­ve opposition. —AFP

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