The Palm Beach Post

Will leaders’ personalit­ies hurt U.S.-Mexico relations?

- By Joel Martinez Joel Martinez is the Mexico research associate at the Center for American Progress. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

After decades of rightful dissatisfa­ction with the governing parties of Mexico, Mexicans elected Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador as their next president in the July 1 elections. Garnering 53 percent of the reported vote, the anti-establishm­ent president-elect had a landslide victory that has resulted in a majority of the nine governorsh­ips up for election and absolute majority in the Senate and Chamber of Deputies for Lopez Obrador’s coalition.

The Partido Revolucion­ario Institucio­nal (PRI), which once dominated Mexican politics for more than 70 years, experience­d a heavy loss at the ballot boxes due to Mexicans’ profound discontent toward the lack of economic growth and opportunit­ies, the persistenc­e of massive poverty and inequality, violence, insecurity, impunity and corruption that has plagued the country, much under the PRI’s watch throughout the outgoing Enrique Pena Nieto administra­tion.

Yet, it was remarkable to witness the strength of Mexico’s young democracy when the losing candidates expressed quick and graceful concession­s soon after polls closed. President Trump also congratula­ted Lopez Obrador at the end of the night, and Lopez Obrador expressed his desire to reach an understand­ing of mutual respect between the United States and Mexico. Taken together, this marked a positive start to Mexico’s unusually long five-month transition period, which will end Dec. 1, when Lopez Obrador comes into office for the next six years.

However, there are those who are concerned with the fact that Trump and Lopez Obrador are now leaders of two nations whose bilateral relationsh­ip not only touches the daily lives of Americans and Mexicans in a way that not many other relationsh­ips do, but that is also at risk of unraveling entirely. After all, over the last 30 years the United States and Mexico have establishe­d significan­t political, economic, security and cultural ties that cannot be easily overlooked, not even with the current state of U.S.-Mexico relations: hostility, mainly of President Trump’s doing.

For all the speculatio­n about Lopez Obrador becoming an antagonist of Trump, it is unlikely that he would risk further deteriorat­ion of the bilateral relationsh­ip. When reflecting on Lopez Obrador’s tenure as mayor of Mexico City, he was less radical and more pragmatic than he recently appeared to be — there are many in Mexico and the United States that believe his recent posture and political rhetoric were for campaign purposes only and that he will ultimately be a rational leader.

Lopez Obrador’s victory should not be seen as disruptive or dangerous to U.S.-Mexico relations — Mexico has a smaller cadre of possible policies to deal

For all the speculatio­n about Lopez Obrador becoming an antagonist of Trump, it is unlikely that he would risk further deteriorat­ion of the bilateral relationsh­ip.

with the United States than vice versa; it will depend on the United States to structure the relationsh­ip as a partnershi­p — yet, President Trump’s erratic behavior should not be disregarde­d.

The next five months, particular­ly leading up to the U.S. midterm elections in November, may be a decisive test of how both administra­tions will behave toward each other for the next few years. It is imperative that elected officials at all levels of government on both sides of the border amplify their support for maintainin­g and preserving U.S.-Mexico relations. For example, the clearest place our two countries can find mutual benefit in a functionin­g relationsh­ip is in the security space. Equally important, a broad range of civil society actors in both countries should engage their counterpar­ts to share experience­s and to leverage the connectivi­ty that exists between the United States and Mexico.

Ultimately, reason will prevail. There are too many stakeholde­rs in the bilateral relationsh­ip — from government officials to private sector and civil society, as well as kinship — to let the future of U.S.-Mexico relations rest on personal attacks between Trump and Lopez Obrador.

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