Los Angeles Times

Mexico leader plans a regional summit

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MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s president said that he will host a meeting of leaders from Latin America this month, including most of the recently elected leftists.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said this week that his counterpar­ts in Chile, Argentina, Ecuador, Peru and Colombia plan to attend.

López Obrador said he is awaiting confirmati­on on whether Brazil’s presidente­lect, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, will join the Nov. 23-25 meeting.

All of the leaders except Ecuadorean President Guillermo Lasso are considered left-leaning. López Obrador has expressed hopes in the past of reforming the Organizati­on of American States, and the gathering may be part of that plan.

López Obrador views the organizati­on as too subordinat­e to U.S. interests and has touted other regional bodies, such as the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, as a possible alternativ­e.

“We would also like to reform the OAS,” he said, “so that it isn’t subordinat­ed to any country, any government, so that it isn’t in thrall to any hegemony.”

López Obrador skipped the U.S.-organized Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles in June because the leaders of Nicaragua, Venezuela and Cuba weren’t invited.

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