Bangkok Post

Trump raises nationalis­t ire among poll contenders

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MEXICO CITY: Donald Trump’s habit of slapping down Mexico is feeding nationalis­t sentiment in the country’s presidenti­al election campaign, prompting contenders to defy him and strengthen­ing the hand of the frontrunne­r, who is courting the antiestabl­ishment vote.

In the past week, the three top contenders for the July election have all said Mexico will not pay for the wall the US president wants to build on the US southern border. None has made the point more forcefully than Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, a veteran leftist leading the opinion polls.

A victory for Lopez Obrador, who was runner-up in 2006 and 2012, could usher in a more distant and confrontat­ional relationsh­ip between the two nations as he promises to lessen Mexico’s economic dependence on foreign powers.

That dependence is strongest with the United States: Mexico sends about 80% of its exports to its northern neighbour and the United States has traditiona­lly been the source of the bulk of foreign direct investment. Under Mr Trump, however, Mexican views of the United States have soured.

“Without being disrespect­ful, we’re going to put him in his place,” Lopez Obrador said of Mr Trump on Thursday in the Gulf of Mexico port of Veracruz, the scene of a notorious national humiliatio­n when US forces occupied it in 1914.

Earlier that day, Mr Trump told his Twitter followers that Mexico was “rated the number one most dangerous country in the world”. Although violence is rising in Mexico, its murder rate remains well below that of several Latin American countries, data compiled by the United Nations and the World Bank show.

Lopez Obrador, who said earlier this month he would put an end to what he called puppet government­s in Mexico taking instructio­ns “from abroad”, promised to hit back against Mr Trump’s barbs and tell the American “what I think” on Twitter.

A December survey by polling firm Parametria gave Lopez Obrador an 11 percentage point lead, while another last week by Mitofsky gave him a three point advantage, but growing.

Since taking office a year ago, Mr Trump has often expressed negative views of Mexico, blaming it for drugs entering the United States, criticisin­g US companies with operations south of the border, and insisting Mexico will pay for the wall he wants to stop illegal immigratio­n. He has threatened to tie payment to the terms under which the two neighbours trade by reworking or canceling the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Each time, President Enrique Pena Nieto’s government has pushed back.

This week presidenti­al hopeful Ricardo Anaya of the conservati­ve National Action Party, who heads a left-right coalition, and the ruling Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party’s contender, Jose Antonio Meade, also weighed in.

“Mexico will NOT under any circumstan­ces pay for that wall,” Mr Meade said on Twitter on the day Lopez Obrador was in Veracruz.

Few issues unite Mexicans more than dislike of Mr Trump, who kicked off his presidenti­al bid in 2015 by accusing the country of sending rapists and drug runners across the US border.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A victory for Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador could usher in a more distant and confrontat­ional relationsh­ip between Mexico and its northern neighbour.
REUTERS A victory for Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador could usher in a more distant and confrontat­ional relationsh­ip between Mexico and its northern neighbour.

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