Trump team meets with new leader
MEXICO CITY — A team of top Trump administration officials traveled to Mexico on Friday to meet its next president and try to repair strained relations in a largely symbolic visit after nearly two years of diplomatic discord.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo met with Mexico’s president-elect, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, a left-leaning populist who won the July 1 vote in a landslide. He also met with outgoing President Enrique Peña Nieto, who urged the delegation to quickly reunite migrant families separated at the border.
Pompeo was joined by Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Jared Kushner, Trump’s sonin-law and senior adviser, who has Mexico in his portfolio of responsibilities. The delegation also included Carl Risch, head of consular affairs at the State Department, a sign of the priority on immigration.
In their meeting with Lopez Obrador, Pompeo said the presence of “four of our most senior people” showed that Trump was serious about improving ties with one of America’s closest allies after bitter clashes over border security, trade and other disputes.
“We wanted to come down here to let you know that President Trump cares deeply for the success of the relationship between our two countries,” Pompeo said.
“Our presence here today signals that to you,” he added. “We know there have been bumps in the road between our two countries, but President Trump is determined to make the relationship between our peoples better and stronger.”
The daylong trip comes after months of rancor between Trump and Mexico.
Trump has referred to Mexicans as criminals, demanded Mexico pay for a border wall it doesn’t want and insulted Peña Nieto. The Mexican president canceled a planned trip to Washington in February after he and Trump tangled on the phone.
So far, Trump has been kinder to Lopez Obrador, including what both governments labeled a positive and cordial half-hour phone call after his election. Trump has pledged to work with the incoming Mexican leader after he takes office Dec. 1.
Peña Nieto was not eligible to run because the Mexican constitution prohibits re-election. The presidential candidate for his Institutional Revolutionary Party came in a distant third.