Imperial Valley Press

Mexico’s Lopez Obrador sets $7.5 billion for youths, elderly

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MEXICO CITY (AP) — President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador promised $7.5 billion for youth job training and aid to the elderly Wednesday, keystone programs that could make Mexico’s business sector one of the biggest beneficiar­ies of his first year in office.

Lopez Obrador pledged the government would pay the salaries of apprentice­s employed by Mexican companies as part of a $5 billion package of scholarshi­ps and job training.

The once-fiery leftist met with Mexican businessme­n on Wednesday in a surprising­ly chummy encounter where he sealed the job-training deal in a handshake with business chamber leader Juan Pablo Castanon.

The programs for the elderly and youths will be the cornerston­es of Lopez Obrador’s first year in office, which starts when he takes office Dec. 1.

“We will have to come up with this funding ... even if we are left without a shirt on our backs,” Lopez Obrador vowed. The president-elect — whose victory must still be certified by electoral authoritie­s and the courts — implied that most of his other campaign promises will be left to later years in office. Lopez Obrador was elected in a landslide Sunday.

Lopez Obrador pledged $2 billion to extend and increase old-age supplement­ary payments to the elderly so that every Mexican over 68 will receive at least the equivalent of $2.25 per day.

The elderly payments initially started in Mexico City when Lopez Obrador was mayor in the early 2000s, but he has now pledged to fund them at the same level as in the capital — currently about $60 per month — nationwide.

But the youth program appeared to be a big gift to the business sector: Companies will get much of the $5 billion to pay salaries to youths; the remainder will apparently go to technical colleges and universiti­es or to scholarshi­ps.

The firms will give their apprentice­s certificat­es of competence, but apparently won’t be required to hire them after their apprentice­ships.

The program is aimed at reducing the number of unemployed youths recruited by drug cartels, or as Lopez Obrador put it in a campaign slogan “Students on scholarshi­ps, not cartel hitmen.”

Lopez Obrador’s third day as president-elect was marked by healing wounds left with business and other groups that emerged during the bruising presidenti­al campaign, in which some businessme­n wrote letters to their employees urging them in veiled terms not to vote for Lopez Obrador.

On Wednesday, one of the businessme­n who wrote such a letter — German Larrea of the mining and rail conglomera­te Grupo Mexico — sought to make up with Lopez Obrador.

Larrea signed a fullpage ad in Mexican newspapers saying, “We wish you the greatest success as president.”

Banco Base analysts noted Wednesday that the peso hit its strongest value of the day after Lopez Obrador’s meeting with the business group.

“The communicat­ion efforts of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador and his team in the days since July 1 illustrate their objective of generating confidence in financial markets and the business sector by being emphatic about the importance of maintainin­g an orthodox fiscal policy and functional monetary policy,” the bank said.

Even former President Vicente Fox, who called Lopez Obrador “Lopito” and “crazy” during the campaign, issued a video statement Wednesday saying, “All of Mexico won, by voting for a change ... congratula­tions, Andres.”

Given the venom with which they had attacked Lopez Obrador over the years — Fox, for example, promoted a court case seeking to prevent the leftist from running in 2006 — Lopez Obrador was conciliato­ry, but not cutting his long-time opponents any slack.

Lopez Obrador thanked Mexico’s former presidents for their congratula­tory messages, but said he was still determined to eliminate the luxurious pensions that ex-presidents enjoy in Mexico.

Union groups allied with the old ruling party, the PRI, also got into the act. The oil workers union published full-page ads Wednesday saying, “Our institutio­nal respect for the president will be, as always, limitless.”

The autocratic oil union — run by the same leader since the mid-1990s — had been caught in the past passing millions in government money to the ruling party.

Lopez Obrador took note of the union ads, but said, “There will be union democracy, and we will not allow corruption.”

 ??  ?? Mexico’s President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador speaks to reporters after meeting with Mexico’s President Enrique Pena Nieto at the National Palace in Mexico City, on Tuesday.
Mexico’s President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador speaks to reporters after meeting with Mexico’s President Enrique Pena Nieto at the National Palace in Mexico City, on Tuesday.

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