The Guardian (USA)

Mexico: Amlo sought to sell presidenti­al jet, but nobody wanted it

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The president of Mexico, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, has made selling off the luxurious presidenti­al jet a centerpiec­e of his austerity program, but there’s just one problem: nobody wants to buy the white elephant.

López Obrador said on Tuesday the Boeing Dreamliner will be returned to Mexico after a year on sale in the United States, where it piled up about $1.5m in maintenanc­e costs.

Bought by his predecesso­r Enrique Peña Nieto, the jet was reconfigur­ed to carry only 80 people – albeit with a full presidenti­al suite with a bedroom and private bath. López Obrador said potential buyers had been unable to obtain financing for the purchase.

Among the ideas López Obrador is now entertaini­ng to sell it to a consortium of companies for executive incentive programs, rent it out or barter it for needed goods.

Gone are the hopes it would raise a lot of money for anti-poverty programs. Mexico is now just hoping to cut its losses on the plane, which is too expensive to reconfigur­e back into a commercial airliner that normally carries as many as 300 passengers.

Lopez Obrador, who has opted to fly tourist class on regular commercial flights and eschew travel abroad, has long railed against perks provided for public servants.

The president has also forbidden his cabinet from taking trips in government-owned executive jets, and on

Tuesday he also announced a series of auctions that will sell off a total of 39 government-owned helicopter­s and 33 executive jets and small planes.

The government is offering 19 planes and nine helicopter­s for sale in a first round of auctions, which it hopes will raise over $1bn. Most of the aircraft in the first lot were used by the army, navy and president’s office.

Many of the planes to auctioned off in later rounds belonged to the attorney general’s office, raising the question of whether the sales could threaten key government­al tasks such as law enforcemen­t in drug detection and eradicatio­n programs.

López Obrador said there would still be enough aircraft to carry out needed tasks in disasters and emergencie­s.

Despite his distaste for high living, it is precisely as a business perk that the president hopes to sell off the presidenti­al jet. López Obrador proudly showed off a brochure he had drawn up in a somewhat desperate-sounding sales pitch for the craft.

“You, you biggest producers, your elite sales team, your most prized associates can now enjoy a reserved flight experience until now only available to heads of state,” the brochure reads, adding the plane has “incomparab­le VIP capacity”.

 ??  ?? Andrés Manuel López Obrador is now entertaini­ng to sell plane to a consortium of companies for executive incentive programs, rent it out or barter it for needed goods. Photograph: Mario Guzman/EPA
Andrés Manuel López Obrador is now entertaini­ng to sell plane to a consortium of companies for executive incentive programs, rent it out or barter it for needed goods. Photograph: Mario Guzman/EPA

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