The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Channeling national pride, Mexican front-runner to campaign by US border

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CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico: Mexico’s presidenti­al front-runner launches his campaign close to the US border yesterday amid tension over US President Donald Trump’s plan to put up a wall between the countries.

If leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador wins the July 1 election, he is expected to be less accommodat­ing towards Trump than the ruling Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party (PRI), which has been lagging in polls because of anger over its failure to contain violence and graft.

His three-month campaign starts in Ciudad Juarez, a tribute to the city’s namesake Benito Juarez, the 19th century Mexican president from indigenous roots whose exiled government resisted a French colonialis­t interventi­on from the unruly border city.

Lopez Obrador recently criticised President Enrique Pena Nieto for “governing with recipes sent from abroad,” but he has lately softened his opposition to the government’s policy of allowing foreign investment in the oil industry.

The ruling party candidate trailing in third place, former finance minister Jose Antonio Meade, launches his own campaign yesterday at the other end of the country in the southeaste­rn town of Merida.

Second-place Ricardo Anaya began campaignin­g on Friday.

Silver-haired leftist Lopez Obrador, a former Mexico City mayor, first ran for president in 2006. He would seek a meeting with Trump ‘as soon as possible’ a senior advisor said, while indicating foreign policy would hew less closely to US regional priorities if he wins.

Trump’s tough trade policies, insults against Mexican migrants and demands for the border wall have angered ordinary Mexicans who see their country as a natural ally of the United States.

Lopez Obrador has made clear US-Mexican relations will remain strong if he wins, while promising to throw Trump a ‘curve ball’ and defend Mexican pride. His unconventi­onal, and at times inconsiste­nt, policy stances have sometimes led to comparison­s with the US president.

He supports the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) with Canada and the United States, but has called for talks started by Trump to renegotiat­e the deal to be suspended until after the election.

In a possible sign of the moderation Lopez Obrador is keen to project, Ciudad Juarez also harbored another of his heroes — Francisco I. Madero, a wealthy, US-educated, moderate leader of the Mexican revolution who tried to unite conservati­ves and radicals.

However, the 64-year-old continues to play to his leftist base, attacking the current government over a US$13 billion airport project he says is tainted by corruption.

He has promised to ‘consult the people’ on reforms and plans to turn the presidenti­al residence into a cultural centre, sell the presidenti­al plane and cut his salary in half.

The candidate’s foreign policy advisor, Hector Vasconcelo­s, has said US relations should be aimed at bolstering economic cooperatio­n and that the current ties overemphas­ise police and military relations.

Vasconcelo­s also said Mexico would not follow the United States in sanctionin­g socialist Venezuela, and would refrain from foreign interferen­ce to focus on critical problems at home such as violence.

As well as its storied history, in modern times Ciudad Juarez, opposite El Paso in Texas, has been the scene of the murders of hundreds of women, many of them low-salaried workers in export factories.

That horror, mirrored in towns across Mexico during a decade of extreme drug violence, is another reason Lopez Obrador chose the city to start campaignin­g, an advisor said.

“It is a symbol of the need to heal Mexican pain,” said senior campaign member Tatiana Clouthier.

Angel Perez, 29, a Mexican national who lives in El Paso, said he would attend Sunday’s campaign launch with his wife and two daughters, hopeful that Lopez Obrador will deliver on promises for change.

“I think he has what it takes to put Trump in his place,” he said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A combinatio­n picture shows candidates (from left) Obrador, Antonio Meade, Ricardo Anaya and Margarita Zavala during a campaign kick-off for the July 1 presidenti­al election at the Angel of Independen­ce monument in Mexico City. — Reuters photo
A combinatio­n picture shows candidates (from left) Obrador, Antonio Meade, Ricardo Anaya and Margarita Zavala during a campaign kick-off for the July 1 presidenti­al election at the Angel of Independen­ce monument in Mexico City. — Reuters photo

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