The Jerusalem Post

Slim says Trump not ‘Terminator,’ sees opportunit­ies for Mexico

- • By CHRISTINE MURRAY

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Billionair­e Carlos Slim said on Friday that Mexico should not fear Donald Trump. There are opportunit­ies for his country in the US president’s economic policies, he said, praising Mexicans for uniting behind their government in talks with the northern neighbor.

In a rare news conference, the telecommun­ications and constructi­on mogul called Trump a negotiator, “not Terminator,” and said his repeated attacks on Mexico had united the country, giving President Enrique Pena Nieto strength in trade and border-security talks.

“This is the most surprising example of national unity that I’ve had the pleasure of seeing in my life,” said Slim, who turned 77 on Saturday. He compared Mexicans’ response to that when a devastatin­g earthquake that hit Mexico City in 1985. “We have to back the president of Mexico so he defends our national interests.”

Slim spoke to reporters after Pena Nieto on Thursday canceled a planned Washington summit with Trump following a tweet by the American that he should stay away unless Mexico agreed to pay for a border wall. Aiming to cool tensions, the two presidents spoke for an hour by phone on Friday, and the battered peso currency strengthen­ed.

Trump’s threats to impose steep tariffs on Mexican products have ravaged the peso and spread worries about the economy, which is heavily dependent on the US market.

However, Slim, who spoke out against his fellow billionair­e during the US election campaign but had dinner with him after the November 8 victory at the polls, said Trump’s policies aimed at growing the US economy would boost Mexico’s growth and provide jobs for Mexican laborers living north of the border.

“The circumstan­ces in the United States are very favorable for Mexico,” Slim said, adding that he has not had any communicat­ion with Trump’s team since the December dinner.

“It wasn’t a romance,” he joked about the meeting.

TRUMP’S ‘REGRESSIVE UTOPIAS’

Referring repeatedly to Trump’s books and other writings, Slim argued that people should not be surprised at Trump’s actions because it is all in his book Great Again: How to Fix Our Crippled America, which Slim said he had not finished reading.

“He’s a great negotiator,” Slim said.

Businesses should not be too worried if Trump’s policies led to the collapse of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) underpinni­ng Mexico’s economy, he said, adding that the country could fall back on World Trade Organizati­on tariffs.

Mexican workers in the United States would benefit from Trump’s planned infrastruc­ture push, Slim said, warning that US protection­ism and other policies could hurt American consumers.

“Among these changes is a return to the past, what a dear friend called ‘regressive utopias,’” he said, calling on the US to focus on advanced manufactur­ing.

Asked about Trump’s plan to build a wall along the US-Mexico border, Slim said the best barrier to illegal immigratio­n would be investment that creates opportunit­ies and jobs in Mexico.

Before the highly anticipate­d news conference, speculatio­n had been growing about whether Slim might try to run for president in 2018. But he poured cold water on that talk.

“I think I can do more on the business side,” he said.

Slim’s largest companies do not have much obvious exposure to any border tax Trump might impose on Mexican imports.

His high-profile holding in the New York Times Co. made him a target during the US campaign, when Trump accused him of using the newspaper to try to help Democratic Party candidate Hillary Clinton. Slim’s shares have limited voting rights.

On Friday, Slim said he had been selling New York Times stock, but his son-in-law later said this was not correct.

At the conference, he was flanked by two of his sons, Carlos and Marco Antonio, and his son-in-law, Arturo Elias, with other family members watching. Most of the Slim family’s wealth comes from Latin America-focused telecoms giant America Movil.

America Movil does have a substantia­l US business called TracFone, which sells prepaid phone plans to customers and rents the networks of big operators.

His next largest companies are retail and industrial conglomera­te Grupo Carso and Mexico-focused bank Grupo Financiero Inbursa.

 ?? (Edgard Garrido/Reuters) ?? MEXICAN BILLIONAIR­E Carlos Slim reads the book ‘Crippled America: How to make America great again’ by Donald Trump during a news conference in Mexico City last Friday. ‘The circumstan­ces in the United States are very favorable for Mexico,’ he said.
(Edgard Garrido/Reuters) MEXICAN BILLIONAIR­E Carlos Slim reads the book ‘Crippled America: How to make America great again’ by Donald Trump during a news conference in Mexico City last Friday. ‘The circumstan­ces in the United States are very favorable for Mexico,’ he said.

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