The Star Malaysia

Obrador vows to end the elite

New Mexico president aims to overturn ‘neo-liberal legacy’

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MEXICO CITY: Veteran leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has taken office as Mexican president, vowing to see off a “rapacious” elite in a country struggling with graft, chronic poverty and gang violence.

Backed by a gigantic Mexican flag, the 65-year-old took the oath of office in the lower house of Congress on Saturday, pledging to bring about a “radical” rebirth of Mexico to overturn what he called a disastrous legacy of decades of “neo-liberal” government­s.

“The government will no longer be a committee at the service of a rapacious minority,” said the new president, often nicknamed Amlo.

Nor would the government, he said, be a “simple facilitato­r of pillaging, as it has been”.

He later addressed a huge crowd of supporters in the heart of the capital, promising to put Mexico’s sizeable indigenous minority first in his drive to root out inequality.

A major challenge facing the new leader is managing relations with Mexico’s top trading partner, the United States, after repeated broadsides by President Donald Trump against Mexico over illegal immigrants crossing the US border.

Lopez Obrador repeated that he was seeking to contain migration through a deal with Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to foster developmen­t in Central America and Mexico.

The first leftist to take office in Mexico in a generation also tried to reassure business after markets slumped since the July 1 polls on worries about his policies, including the abrupt cancellati­on of a new Mexico City airport.

He reiterated that investment­s in the country of 130 million people would be safe and pledged to respect central bank independen­ce.

Saying his government would make savings by stopping losses from the public purse into the “sewer of corruption”, he promised not to raise national debt or taxes.

But he promised higher wages for the poor and zero tolerance for corruption in his administra­tion.

And in a reference to one of his heroes, the 19th-century Mexican President Benito Juarez, who separated the church and the state, Lopez Obrador said his government would ensure a divide between economic and political power.

Making 16 references to “neo-liberal” policies in his speech, he vowed to abolish the “regime” he said it had created.

He blamed the government of his predecesso­r Enrique Pena Nieto for causing a plunge in oil output by opening the energy industry in Latin America’s No. 2 economy to private investment.

Instead, he vowed to ramp up public investment to rescue state oil company Pemex, which is suffering from heavy debts.

The government will no longer be at the service of a rapacious minority. Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador

 ?? — Reuters ?? Show of support: A large crowd celebratin­g Obrador at Zocalo Square in Mexico City.
— Reuters Show of support: A large crowd celebratin­g Obrador at Zocalo Square in Mexico City.
 ?? — Reuters ?? Centre of attention: Obrador holding up a staff of command received from indigenous people at Zocalo Square.
— Reuters Centre of attention: Obrador holding up a staff of command received from indigenous people at Zocalo Square.

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