San Francisco Chronicle

New president, U.S. face host of tensions, challengin­g issues

- By Matthew Lee and Mark Stevenson Matthew Lee and Mark Stevenson are Associated Press writers.

MEXICO CITY — Migrants, trade, crime, the border wall: The challenges to the modern U.S.-Mexico relationsh­ip have perhaps never been as stark and divisive as they are now, at a critical juncture for both countries.

With a new president preparing to take power in Mexico City this weekend and the Trump administra­tion set to enter its third year, the two neighbors find themselves lurching between crisis and opportunit­y on each front. While a trade dispute that President Trump had fanned with great enthusiasm seems set to ease, the other issues remain unresolved and potential flash points for both countries. “This is really a key moment,” said Earl Anthony Wayne, a former U.S. ambassador to Mexico. “There are very serious short-term problems that have to be managed and managed in a way that can solidify relations over the course of the next six years.”

President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador takes office Saturday, just a day after the two nations and Canada are to sign a replacemen­t accord for the North America Free Trade Agreement, which Trump lambasted during the 2016 campaign and vowed to cancel.

Sealing that deal was an achievemen­t for the outgoing Mexican government as well as for Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner. He will attend the signing of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement at the Group of 20 summit in Buenos Aires, and will be awarded the highest honor Mexico gives to foreigners, the Order of the Aztec Eagle.

Neither Trump, who has reached out multiple times to Lopez Obrador since his election in July, nor Kushner will be at the inaugurati­on. But Vice President Mike Pence will be there as will Kushner’s wife, Ivanka Trump. In addition, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who has already met Mexico’s incoming foreign minister Marcelo Ebrard at least twice, plans to see him again in Washington on Sunday. Kushner will see the foreign minister and his team on Monday. These are indication­s the White House is keen to keep in close contact with the new Mexican leadership.

Neverthele­ss, the administra­tion has yet to nominate a new ambassador to Mexico, a post that has been vacant since May. And the apparent personal goodwill and positive developmen­ts on trade can’t mask deeper tensions over migration and drug traffickin­g, Trump’s demands that Mexico pay for a border wall and the deployment of U.S. troops to the southern frontier with a threat to seal all crossings. There’s also the matter of the president’s frequent denigratio­n of Mexicans, repeatedly saying Mexico was sending “criminals” and “rapists” to the U.S.

 ?? Rebecca Blackwell / Associated Press ?? Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador takes over as head of state at a critical juncture in the relationsh­ip between Mexico and the U.S.
Rebecca Blackwell / Associated Press Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador takes over as head of state at a critical juncture in the relationsh­ip between Mexico and the U.S.

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