The Arizona Republic

Mexican president mixes policy in 1st year

Support is high for López Obrador, although real progress has been slow

- Mark Stevenson REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP

MEXICO CITY – Andrés Manuel López Obrador marked the anniversar­y of winning Mexico’s presidency amid some strange contradict­ions.

A leftist, he has been more fiscally conservati­ve than any of his predecesso­rs since the 1950s. He has cut the size of government so dramatical­ly it has drawn protests. He has been more openly religious than most Mexican presidents in recent memory.

He still spends most of his days on the campaign trail, holding near-daily rallies in outlying states even though he is firmly in control of Congress and the opposition is a fragmented mess.

He has better relations with U.S. President Donald Trump than his conservati­ve predecesso­r, and has cracked down on migrants harder.

Despite risky economic moves, polls say his approval rating ranges from 66% to 72%, seven months after he took office Dec. 1.

In a speech last week at a mass rally celebratin­g the year since his victory, López Obrador seemed eager to reclaim his credential­s as a transforma­tive “radical,” even though some of his biggest bragging points were government spending reductions, the stability of the peso and financial markets.

“There is no going back on this process, not one step back, no hesitating or halfway measures,” he said, referring to his anti-corruption drive. “We are authentic, transforme­rs, pacifists, but at the same time in defending the causes of honesty, justice and democracy, we are not moderates, we are radicals!”

Clearly, many Mexicans are reacting more to his personalit­y — folksy, smiling, humble, incredibly accessible — than any big government­al results. Unlike previous Mexican leaders, he still shakes hands in public, eschews security details, flies economy class on commercial flights and takes selfies with fellow passengers.

“I think he has a good vision, but his proposals, the team he has, I’m not saying they are good or bad. There are just a lot of doubts there,” said Argelia Miranda Vazquez, a government worker who was engaged in a friendly discussion with some López Obrador supporters outside a huge anniversar­y rally the president held in Mexico City’s main plaza Monday.

Like many, she was charmed by some of his symbolic moves to dismantle the high-level, distant, arrogant presidency of years past, like taking lavish pensions away from ex-presidents. “But aside from that, everything continues the same,” Miranda Vazquez said.

Rubén Jimenez, a López Obrador supporter, agreed that the biggest change has been psychologi­cal.

“Things are better, in popular terms, because the people have more hope that things will get better,” Jimenez said. “The government is more democratic, and it is getting closer to the people.”

But even Jimenez agreed that real progress has been slow.

Homicides remain at historic highs, though the rate of increase has slowed. The government oil company is staggering under debt, and some government spending cuts have hampered medical care at state-run hospitals. The business community is spooked by López Obrador’s propensity for rescinding what he feels are unfair infrastruc­ture contracts. The Cabinet, largely composed of newcomers, is on what can be most kindly described as a learning curve.

The Cabinet “is learning, and very slowly,” Jimenez said. “The people’s needs have to be met more — higher wages. We need quicker progress. The National Guard (López Obrador’s new military-based policing force) has to make more rapid progress.”

The 65-year-old president maintains an exhausting schedule of daily morning news conference­s, capped off by his outdoor rallies. But though the opposition is disorganiz­ed, Mexico is increasing­ly polarized, in part because López Obrador laughingly dismisses anyone who opposes him as “fifi” — a word that means roughly posh, elite or frivolous.

Constantly whipping up his base while disparagin­g the opposition is something López Obrador has in common with Trump, or people like conservati­ve Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, says Federico Estevez, a political science professor at the Autonomous Technologi­cal Institute of Mexico.

“It’s the new politics, you know. It’s Trump, it’s Salvini, it’s all of them. They all do it. It’s only the establishm­ent that doesn’t do it,” Estevez said. “Obviously, it works.”

The argument that López Obrador is more populist than leftist may have some validity. He has cut out some social programs that went directly to Mexico’s poorest people, and replaced them with handouts — like scholarshi­p and work programs — that go to a broader income band.

He has bent over backward to avoid conflict with Trump, especially on issues like migrants.

López Obrador originally ordered Central American migrants be given work and travel visas, and promised investment to create jobs in their home countries.

 ??  ?? An official from the presidency looks on from atop Old City Hall, ahead of the start of a rally on the one-year anniversar­y of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s election, in Mexico City’s main square on Monday.
An official from the presidency looks on from atop Old City Hall, ahead of the start of a rally on the one-year anniversar­y of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s election, in Mexico City’s main square on Monday.

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