Sun.Star Pampanga

Mexican president defies leftist label in virus response

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When Andrés Manuel López Obrador won Mexico’s presidency after years of agitat ing for change, many expected a transforma­tive leader who would take the country to the left even as much of Latin America moved right.

Instead, López Obrador is leading like a conservati­ve in many ways — cutting spending, investing heavily in fossil fuel developmen­t and helping the U.S. crack down on the northbound flow of migr ant s.

As coronaviru­s spreads through Mexico, the president known as AMLO has rejected widespread shutdowns and pressed to keep the economy going. He’s used the pandemic to justify weakening environmen­tal protection­s, and pushed for oil-centered infrastruc­ture projects despite the collapse in petroleum prices. He’s resisted both economic stimulus programs and expansion of coronaviru­s testing and tracking.

López Obrador is resuming his trademark tours of the Mexican countrysid­e this week despite the fact that the country is suffering its highest rates of coronaviru­s infection and death rates so far.

After a two-month hiatus, López Obrador returned Monday to the on-the-ground tours of the provinces. In Cancun and Isla Mujeres, he visited a Navy base and presided over a ceremony marking the start of constructi­on of a tourist train that will link beach resorts and ruin sites on the Yucatan peninsula. His only concession to the coronaviru­s pandemic is that he is no longer wading through crowds of supporters, kissing children and receiving hugs.

When he’s not on tour, López Obrador uses social media and daily press conference­s to dominate the news cycle and label virtually any criticism as part of a conspiracy. Many observers draw parallels to U.S. President Donald Trump’s communicat­ion strategy.

“They really are similar,” said Federico Estevez, a political science professor at the Autonomous Technologi­cal Institute of Mexico.

When López Obrador doesn’t like what statistics show, he does not shy away from changing them.

He recently suggested replacing gross domestic product, which hasn’t seen any growth in over a year, with a “wellbeing” index to measure “happiness?”

“We are going to ask people, not just about their material conditions, but about other factors like spiritual well-being, and not just material issues,” López Obrador said last week.

On coronaviru­s, Mexico says it is deliberate­ly administer­ing very few tests for the disease. Mexico has performed only about 250,000 tests for a nation of over 125 million, or less than 2 in 1,000 people, leading critics to say the country’s COVID19 figures are greatly underestim­ated.

“The Mexican government, unlike many and perhaps most government­s, has declared that its epidemiolo­gical policy has no intention of counting each and every case,” said Hugo López-Gatell, the assistant health secretary who is the president’s point-man on the virus. “We are not interested in it, because it is useless, costly and not feasible to test everybody in the country.”

AMLO was confronted with a choice of expensive, probably unobtainab­le testing, or a quick expansion of hospital beds and the choice for him was obvious: equip beds.

His single stated goal in the pandemic is “that we not be outstrippe­d, that there be enough hospital beds.”

What’s more striking is the informatio­n Mexico hides: figures on “excess deaths,” or patterns of deaths from previous years that could serve to tell how many people have actually died this year compared to previous years of causes like pneumonia. There is a two-year lag in reporting such figures.

The civic group Mexicans Against Corruption said the strategy of little testing “limits the possibilit­y of identifyin­g super-spreaders, people who are asymptomat­ic and spread the virus massively,” and could spell disaster as the economy re-opens starting June 1.

On the economic front, López Obrador views the pandemic as an opportunit­y to deepen his drive toward a state-centered, nationalis­tic movement that is not beholden to internatio­nal scrutiny.

And like Trump, López Obrador has used the pandemic to weaken some environmen­tal policies. If oil — the stuff that dreams were made of in his home state of Tabasco in the 1970s — is going out of fashion, why not just cancel the renewable energy projects that compete with oil? López Obrador is forging ahead with building a new oil refinery, even as excess capacity builds around the world.

His love of oil — he has cancelled electricit­y purchases from new wind and solar energy projects, in part to save government-owned fuel-oil plants from competitio­n — was born in his first government job in the 1970s. As head of indigenous affairs, he turned to the state-run oil company, Pemex, to help solve the lack of farmland in the swampy homeland of the Chontal Indians. He got Pemex to lend him a dredging barge and dredge up wetlands to pile soil into thin strips of land.

“The answer to understand­ing him is to go back and look at his hometown,” Estevez said, referring to the small Tabasco town where López Obrador grew up. “He’s never left that world. Biography does matter ... In Tabasco it’s all public investment ... that’s all he’s ever known.”

However, as the rest of the world turns Keynesian, expanding spending, Mexico’s president has gone to unpreceden­ted lengths to cut budgets, asking public universiti­es to give back part of their budgets, scientists to donate some of their pay, and federal officials to take a pay cut.

The president has granted no tax payment extensions, and instead relied largely on small loans to small and micro-businesses. He vows not to borrow a dime or even run up a budget deficit, a pretty inflexible stance given that Mexico faces a 10% drop in GDP and the loss of a million jobs this year. And he has angered private investors with moves like cancelling the new solar and wind energy projects, many of which are already built.

According to report by Bank of America Global Research “the lack of testing will likely keep demand for services constraine­d even when supply restrictio­ns are lifted, making for a weak recovery. The cleanest example is tourist-related services,” which are Mexico’s third-largest source of foreign revenues behind exports and remittance­s. ---AP

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