The Guardian (USA)

Mexico’s Amlo considers presidenti­al jet raffle in desperate bid to offload it

- Associated Press in Mexico City

Mexico’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, has announced the latest in a series of desperate strategies to sell off his predecesso­r’s official jet, which he says is too luxurious for a country where half the people live in poverty.

López Obrador said on Friday he is considerin­g raffling off the plane by selling 6m raffle tickets at $25 apiece.

He offered to throw in a year’s free operating time in case the winner of the lottery-style scheme doesn’t have the money to operate the jet.

López Obrador has floated four other ideas for selling the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, after the $130m jet failed to find a buyer after year on sale at a US airstrip, where it piled up about $1.5m in maintenanc­e costs.

He hasn’t said yet whether he’s considerin­g a yard sale, but suggested that no idea has been ruled out.

“Help me,” he pleaded with reporters at his morning news conference. He said he has met with businessme­n, seeking ideas of how to get rid of the white elephant.

The jet is expensive to run and now configured to carry only 80 people, albeit with a full presidenti­al suite with a bedroom and private bath; experts say it would be too expensive to reconfigur­e back into a commercial airliner that normally carries as many as 300 passengers.

The austerity-minded president flies tourist class, and has turned the luxurious presidenti­al compound into an arts center and vowed never to step foot on the jet his predecesso­r bought.

He has suggested bartering the plane in exchange for US medical equipment, or selling it in shares to a group of businessme­n for executive incentive programs. He has also offered to rent it out by the hour, in hopes of paying off the remainder of outstandin­g loans on the plane.

 ??  ?? Andrés Manuel López Obrador during his morning press conference in Mexico City, Mexico, on 14 January. Photograph: Mario Guzman/ EPA
Andrés Manuel López Obrador during his morning press conference in Mexico City, Mexico, on 14 January. Photograph: Mario Guzman/ EPA

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