2006 presidential election In September 2005, the PRD nominated López Obrador as presidential pre-candidate for the
2006 general election.
Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas declined to participate in the internal elections when polls showed López Obrador as the clear favorite. Until March 2006, polls showed him as the presidential frontrunner; however, his numbers had declined by late April. An article published by
La Crónica de Hoy in March 2006 said that Mexican
Bolivarian Circles and students, allegedly assisted by Venezuelan agents, distributed "
Bolivarian propaganda in favor of Andrés Manuel López Obrador" throughout cities in Mexico and that such groups were given "economic support, logistics advice and ideological instruction" from the
Hugo Chávez government. Some left-wing politicians and analysts criticized López Obrador for including in his close staff many former members of the PRI who fought against his party in the 1980s and 1990s, such as
Arturo Núñez (one of the authors of
Fobaproa contingency fund),
Manuel Camacho Solís and
Marcelo Ebrard. The guerrilla leader of the
Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN),
Subcomandante Marcos, said López Obrador was a false left-wing candidate, arguing that he was a centrist candidate. Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas did not participate in campaign events but stated that he would still vote for his party, the PRD. López Obrador's proposals, including his
50 commitments, produced mixed opinions from analysts.
The Washington Post wrote that López Obrador used U.S. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt as inspiration for his proposals. On 19 May,
Roberto Madrazo, the PRI's presidential candidate, hinted at the possibility of an alliance with López Obrador to prevent
National Action Party (PAN) candidate
Felipe Calderón from winning the election after both parties criticized president Vicente Fox for what they saw as illegal support by the federal government for Calderón. A PRD spokesperson said both parties entered an information-sharing agreement regarding the issue. This, combined with calls from high-ranking PRI member
Manuel Bartlett (former
Secretary of the Interior during the
1988 presidential election fraud) to vote for López Obrador, aroused media speculation that the PRI and the PRD would ally. On 28 May, after López Obrador discounted any such alliance because the PRI and PRD political tendencies could not be reconciled, Roberto Madrazo indicated that his comments were misunderstood and that he would not step down or endorse any other candidate. In 2006, the Spanish newspaper
El País criticized López Obrador for what it characterized as "extreme" verbal insults toward Mexican government institutions and President
Vicente Fox.
Election results On 6 July 2006, the
Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) announced the final vote count in the
2006 presidential election, resulting in a narrow margin of 0.56 percentage points (243,934 votes) of victory for his opponent,
Felipe Calderón. López Obrador appealed the results, claiming widespread irregularities, and demanded an election recount. (A generalized recount is only to be carried in extreme circumstances, according to Mexican Electoral Tribunal Jurisprudence S3ELJ14-2004.) On 8 July 2006, López Obrador called for nationwide protests to ask for a national recount, stating "the government would be responsible for any flare-up of anger after officials rejected his demand for a manual recount of Sunday's extremely close vote." However, on 5 September 2006, the
Federal Electoral Tribunal (TEPJF) ruled that the election was fair and that Calderón was the winner and would become president. In contesting the election, López Obrador and his coalition made several arguments: (a) that President Fox, the Consejo Coordinador Empresarial (CCE), a business interest group, and other organizations had illegally interfered in the presidential campaign, which is strictly prohibited by electoral law, thereby providing grounds for election annulment; that (b) that votes were fraudulently tallied on 2 July and afterward; and that (c) there was widespread and significant evidence of electoral irregularities, ranging from stuffed ballot boxes and inconsistent tally reports to improper and illegal handling of the ballot trail and voter intimidation. The Court did find that President Fox and the CCE had interfered in the elections by campaigning for Felipe Calderón, which is against electoral laws. The Court ruled that both interferences could not be considered a sufficient judicial cause to annul the election. In response to fraud allegations, the Court stated there was insufficient evidence to annul the election. López Obrador and his coalition had alleged irregularities in many polling stations and requested a national recount. Ultimately, the TEPJF, in a unanimous vote, ordered a recount of about 9% of the polling stations. The Supreme Court later ruled that the evidence presented did not demonstrate the occurrence of sufficient irregularities to change the election outcome. In response to this result, in a move reminiscent of
Francisco I. Madero declaring himself provisional President of Mexico after calling the 1910 elections against
Porfirio Díaz fraudulent, López Obrador's followers proclaimed him the
Presidente Legitimo (Legitimate President), inaugurated him in a ceremony in the Zócalo and called for the creation of an alternative, parallel government. and later referenced Covarrubias and IMO. Several days later, the
Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) published its final tally, which had him down by a margin of 0.58%, or approximately 243,000 votes. López Obrador then initiated legal actions, claiming election irregularities in 54% of polling stations, and demanded a "vote by vote" recount in all polling stations. The
Federal Electoral Tribunal (TEPJF) discussed the case and eventually dismissed it. The IFE called for the candidates to refrain from proclaiming themselves as the winner, president-elect, or president until the final resolution. Both candidates disobeyed this call. In an interview with U.S. Spanish-language TV network
Univision, López Obrador referred to himself as "President of Mexico". López Obrador held several gatherings in downtown Mexico City, with hundreds of thousands attending. On 31 July, as an act of civil disobedience, he organized a blockade of 12 kilometers of
Paseo de la Reforma, one of the city's most important roads, which houses several hotels, corporate headquarters, and the
Mexico City Stock Market. Business groups said the blockades cost Mexico City businesses in the area millions of pesos in losses. On 5 August, the TEPJF met in a public session to decide the outcome of the complaints the PRD and its coalition partners had filed. The seven magistrates voted unanimously to order a recount of 11,839 ballot boxes in 155 districts (9.2% of the total) despite López Obrador's public demand for a total recount. The TEPJF based its decision for a partial recount on its finding that, despite publicly demanding a vote-by-vote general recount, López Obrador's party filed legal challenges for 71,000 polling stations (54%). Therefore, by law, the TEPJF found it could order a recount of only those 71,000 polling stations contested. The TEPJF ruled it could not order a recount of the votes not in controversy because "the certainty asked by the [López Obrador] Coalition is tied to the respect for the tallies certified by the citizens in the polling stations, not in controversy." The TEPJF did certify that principles of certainty were grounds for a recount in some stations since there was evidence of possible irregularities. On 8 August, López Obrador sent a message to the press regarding the blockades, where he explained his reasons for continuing the "peaceful civil resistance". López Obrador held a rally called "National Democratic Convention" on 16 September,
Independence Day, when a military parade was scheduled. The convention started after the military parade. Claiming he country's institutions to be colluded, López Obrador said that they "no longer work" and called for creating new ones. López Obrador led a rally on the day of the State of the Union speech, where sympathizers prevented President Vicente Fox from delivering a speech inside the
Legislative Palace of San Lázaro. They claimed that the President "had created a police state" in the area around Congress. They interpreted it as an unconstitutional act that made it impossible for Congress to be called into session. López Obrador told his followers not to be lured into violent confrontations with the police, declaring, "We aren't going to fall into any trap. We aren't going to be provoked." He urged his followers to remain in the Zócalo instead of marching to the Legislative Palace. According to a poll published on 1 December 2006 in
El Universal, 42% thought that Calderón's victory was fraudulent, and 46% thought it was not.
"Legitimate presidency" On 20 November 2006, during the federal holiday commemorating the
Mexican Revolution, López Obrador's sympathizers proclaimed him the "Legitimate President" at a rally in the Zócalo in Mexico City. The action was planned in another rally, the "National Democratic Convention", in which supporters gave him the title. López Obrador called for the establishment of a parallel government and shadow cabinet at the convention. After supporters proclaimed him as the "Legitimate President of Mexico", In his speech at the proclamation ceremony, López Obrador promised to "procure the happiness of the people" and announced twenty "actions of government", such as fostering a process for renewal of public institutions and defending the right to information and demanding openness of communication media. Days later, López Obrador announced that he would earn a salary of 50,000
pesos (US$2,500) a month, provided by donations.
Reactions Reactions to the "legitimate presidency" varied widely. An opinion by
El País said that López Obrador's "lack of consideration for democratic institutions and the rule of law seriously endanger civil peace in Mexico." After speculation on whether or not López Obrador's self-proclamation was against the law, the PRI stated that this political action was not a crime. Liébano Sáenz, chief of staff of former President
Ernesto Zedillo, said López Obrador "will become the conscience of the nation, which will do much good for Mexican democracy."
José Raúl Vera López, the Roman Catholic bishop of
Saltillo, Coahuila, declared that the so-called "legitimate presidency" was a result of the "profound discontent with how the country has been run" and that López Obrador had "very deep moral backing". A poll by
Grupo Reforma indicated that 56% of Mexicans disapproved of López Obrador taking the title, while only 19% approved. Sixty-three percent of those polled said the former candidate had lost credibility. Other responses in the poll included 82% describing the political atmosphere in Mexico as "tense", 45% of those polled blamed it on the PRD, 20% blamed it on the PAN, and 25% blamed both parties. The poll was a telephone survey of 850 adults on 18 November with 95%
confidence interval of +/-3.4%
margin of error. In the first few months of his term, President Calderón announced initiatives that mirrored López Obrador's initiatives. These included
price ceilings for
tortillas through the
Tortilla Price Stabilization Pact, that protected small corn producers, reductions to the president and cabinet minister salaries, and the proposal for a constitutional amendment that, if passed, would have lowered wages for public servants and impose caps on their remuneration. Some interpreted these measures as "seeking to fulfill a campaign promise to incorporate the agenda of election rival Andrés Manuel López Obrador into his government."
Occupation of Congress , bishop of
Saltillo, declared that López Obrador's so-called "legitimate presidency" is the result of "deep discontent with the way the country has been run," and that Obrador had "very deep moral backing" Congress was also taken by legislators of the
Broad Progressive Front (FAP), the PRD,
Labor, and
Convergence parties on 10 April 2008 because they disagreed with the Government regarding energy policy discussions, claiming they were unconstitutional. López Obrador's followers, using chairs and tables and barricades, took both chambers of Congress and had them chained, thus avoiding the passage of secondary laws which modified the legal framework of the Mexican state-owned oil company,
Pemex. López Obrador and his followers opposed these laws and viewed them as leading to the
de facto privatization of the company. López Obrador requested a four-month debate on energy policies instead of the 50-day one presented by the PAN, PRI,
Green Party and
New Alliance.
2012 presidential election in 2012 López Obrador ran again as the PRD,
Labor Party, and
Citizens' Movement candidate under the coalition
Movimiento Progresista in the
2012 presidential election.
Political proposals Economic proposals In November 2011, López Obrador announced some of his economic proposals: • Job creation: A sustained 6% growth rate to generate the new 1.2 million jobs needed each year. • Austerity: Reducing salaries of government officials and unnecessary spending, saving around US$30 billion a year. • Progressive fiscal reforms: López Obrador said the people who make less should pay a smaller percentage of taxes than those who make more money. • No new taxes or increases on existing taxes: López Obrador plans to focus on ending fiscal privileges. • Competition: End monopolies; any private citizen who wants to participate in media, television, and telephony should be able to.
Security policy López Obrador had been a firm critic of Felipe Calderón's crime strategy and promised to reduce military presence on the streets, offering reparations to victims of the Mexican drug war and emphasizing the protection of human rights in the country. López Obrador proposed a single police command that would gradually assume the activities of the
Mexican Navy and the
Mexican Army, as well as a single intelligence agency to tackle the financial networks of criminal organizations. López Obrador promised to reactivate the economy and social growth, so more people could have access to a "better life" without joining cartels and abandoning the rule of law. López Obrador summed up his security policy as "
Abrazos, no balazos" (Hugs, not bullets).
Proposed cabinet López Obrador announced a tentative cabinet. Among them were: •
Marcelo Ebrard as Secretary of the Interior •
Rogelio Ramírez de la O as Secretary of the Treasury •
Juan Ramón de la Fuente as Secretary of Education •
Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo as Secretary of the Environment •
Javier Jiménez Espriú as Secretary of Communications and Transportation •
Fernando Turner as Secretary of Economic Development •
Adolfo Hellmund López as Secretary of Energy •
René Drucker Colín as Secretary of Science and Technology •
Elena Poniatowska as Secretary of Culture •
Héctor Vasconcelos as Secretary of Foreign Affairs
Election results The election was won by
Enrique Peña Nieto of the PRI, with 38.2%, to 31.6% for López Obrador. López Obrador did not accept the preliminary results, as most votes had not been counted. Subsequently, he claimed vote buying and other irregularities and demanded a full recount by the
Federal Electoral Institute (IFE). The IFE found irregularities but confirmed the results on 6 July. López Obrador rejected this announcement and filed a complaint to invalidate the election. He alleged vote-buying, spending above election regulations, illegal fundraising, and vote fraud. On 30 August, the
Electoral Tribunal of the Federal Judiciary formally rejected his complaint.
Peña Nieto vote-buying controversy At a news conference, López Obrador claimed that the election was "plagued with irregularities" and accused the PRI of vote buying. He also claimed that the PRI handed out gifts to lure voters into casting their vote for that party with the cooperation of
Soriana, a retail chain. Nonetheless, the PRI and the store denied those accusations and threatened to sue López Obrador. Peña Nieto vowed to imprison anyone – including members of the PRI – if they were found guilty of electoral fraud. Despite Peña Nieto's statement, videos by citizens about the Soriana cards surfaced on the internet.
Creation of Morena (2012–2014) (center) after submitting the formal political registration of Morena to the INE Following the 2012 presidential election loss, López Obrador told a rally in Mexico City's
Zócalo on 9 September 2012 that he would withdraw from the Democratic Revolution Party "on the best of terms". He said he was working on founding a new party from the National Regeneration Movement ("Movimiento de Regeneración Nacional" in Spanish), or
Morena, for its acronym in Spanish. A couple of days after his departure from the PRD, federal deputy
Ricardo Monreal stated it was a "divorce for convenience", and that López Obrador did the most responsible thing to avoid polarization of the country. According to polls and surveys, in 2012 most of the Mexican public had a negative view of the establishment of Morena as a political party. On 7 January 2014,
Martí Batres, president of Morena, presented the documentation to the INE to be acknowledged political party. In 2014, López Obrador revealed why he left the PRD, stating, "I left the PRD because the leaders of that party betrayed the people, they went with Peña Nieto and approved the
Pact for Mexico, which is nothing more than a Pact against Mexico. I can not be in a party where tax increases were approved, and it was approved that they would increase the price of gasoline every month. Gasoline in Mexico costs more than in the United States, the salary in Mexico is the lowest in the entire North American continent, and instead of asking for wage increases, the PRD rose to the podium to ask for an increase in the price of gasoline, it's an embarrassment." After
Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas criticized him for forming his political party, on 7 July 2014, López Obrador posted on social media that, "PRD leaders and most of its legislators voted for the fiscal reforms [raising taxes and gas prices] and with their collaboration they paved the way for privatization of the oil industry." On 10 July 2014, the INE approved Morena as an official political party to receive federal funds and participate in the
2015 legislative elections.
2018 presidential election López Obrador participated again in the
2018 presidential election, his third presidential run. In the election, he represented Morena, the left-wing
Labor Party (PT), and the
socially conservative right-wing
Social Encounter Party (PES) under the coalition
Juntos Haremos Historia. Pre-election polls indicated he had a double-digit lead over candidates
Ricardo Anaya,
José Antonio Meade, and
Jaime Rodríguez Calderón. In 2018, the Mexican publication
Aristegui Noticias criticized
Vicente Fox for what it characterized as "extreme" verbal insults on Twitter towards López Obrador's crackdown on
institutional corruption.
Juntos Haremos Historia Background On 24 June 2017, the PT agreed to fight the 2018 election in an electoral alliance with Morena; however, the coalition had not officially registered with the
National Electoral Institute (INE), the country's electoral authority. For Morena, the alliance consolidated after the withdrawal of the PT's candidate
Óscar González Yáñez, who resigned his candidacy and called for votes in favor of
Delfina Gómez Álvarez, the standard-bearer in the state elections of the State of Mexico in 2017. In October 2017, at PT's National Congress, as party president
Alberto Anaya was reelected to another 6-year term, PT formalized its coalition with Morena. At first, there was speculation about the possibility of a front grouping all the left-wing parties: Morena, the PRD, PT, and the MC. However, López Obrador rejected any agreement due to political differences, especially after the 2017 State of Mexico elections, where the candidates of the PRD and MC continued with their campaigns and refused to support the Morena candidate. At the end of November 2017, the leaders of Morena and the PES announced that they were in talks to form a possible alliance:
Hugo Eric Flores Cervantes, president of the PES, said: "We don't negotiate with the PRI, we have two options, go alone or with Morena."
Confirmation '' On 13 December 2017, PES joined the coalition between Morena and the PT, and it was formalized under the name
Juntos Haremos Historia (Together We Will Make History). Following the signing of the agreement, López Obrador was appointed as a pre-candidate for the three political groups. It was a partial coalition that supported López Obrador as the presidential candidate and divided the legislative elections between the three: Morena chose candidates in 150 federal electoral districts (
out of 300) and 32 Senate rates, while the PT and the PES each nominated 75 candidates for the Chamber of Deputies and 16 for the Senate. The alliance received criticism as it was a coalition between two left-wing parties (Mrena and the PT) with a formation related to the evangelical right (PES). In response, Morena national president
Yeidckol Polevnsky said that her party "believes in inclusion and teamwork to rescue Mexico" and that they will continue to defend human rights; in turn,
Hugo Eric Flores Cervantes, national president of the PES, said that "the only possibility of real change in our country is the one headed by Andrés Manuel López Obrador" and that his party had decided to be "on the right side of history". Andrés Manuel López Obrador said this would be his last attempt to become president, rejecting the idea of becoming a permanent moral leader for the Mexican left-wing.
International solidarity In Paris, France, there is the "Official French Committee of Morena", on which several occasions have presented their support to the candidate in small rallies in that European country. In February 2018, French deputy and former presidential candidate
Jean-Luc Mélenchon, founder of the
La France Insoumise party, met with López Obrador, before the official start of the electoral campaign in Mexico, and described his possible victory in the following terms: "If they manage to thwart the plans against them and win the elections, it will be a great change for Mexico and all of Latin America."
Miguel Ángel Revilla, president of the
Autonomous Community of Cantabria, Spain, mentioned López Obrador in an interview on the
El Hormiguero program, where he spoke of the possibility of victory for the presidential candidate in 2018: "I think he's going to win because Mexico needs a change to a good person because they are presenting him as a Chávez-type populist, or Fidel Castro-type, but really, because he wants to end corruption and inequality within [the limits of] what he can do because the country does not deserve what it has until now; I want to send my support to this man, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, from here." López Obrador has been referred to as the "ideological twin" of the
US's progressive leader
Bernie Sanders and the
UK's Labour Party leader,
Jeremy Corbyn, the latter having visited López Obrador and invited him over to the
British Parliament.
Proposed Cabinet In December 2017, López Obrador presented his proposed cabinet: •
Olga Sánchez Cordero as Secretary of the Interior •
Héctor Vasconcelos as Secretary of Foreign Affairs •
Carlos Manuel Urzúa Macías as Secretary of Finance •
Maria Luisa Albores as Secretary of Social Development •
Josefa González Blanco Ortiz Mena as Secretary of Environment •
Rocío Nahle García as Secretary of Energy •
Graciela Márquez Colín as Secretary of Economy •
Esteban Moctezuma Barragán as Secretary of Education •
Víctor Villalobos as Secretary of Agriculture •
Javier Jiménez Espriú as Secretary of Communications •
Irma Eréndira Sandoval as Secretary of the Civil Service •
Jorge Alcocer Varela as Secretary of Health •
Luisa María Alcalde Luján as Secretary of Labor •
Román Meyer Falcón as Secretary of Agrarian Development and Urban Planning •
Miguel Torruco Marqués as Secretary of Tourism •
Alejandra Frausto Guerrero as Secretary of Culture
Replacements • It was announced on 5 July 2018 that Héctor Vasconcelos would be replaced at Foreign Affairs by
Marcelo Ebrard, following Vasconcelos's election to the Senate. • Arturo Herrera replaced Carlos Manuel Urzúa Macías at Finance on 10 July 2019. • Víctor Manuel Toledo replaced Josefa González Blanco Ortíz Mena as
Minister of Environment and Natural Resources on 25 May 2019.
Political positions during campaign (left) and López Obrador (center) in
San Baltazar Chichicapam,
Oaxaca, in March 2016 López Obrador has been described as
left-wing and
populist. In his inauguration speech, he inveighed against
neoliberalism, calling it a "disaster" and a "calamity" for the country, and promised "
a fourth transformation", in reference to three major events in Mexican history, the
Mexican War of Independence (1810–1821), the
Reform War (1858–1861) and the
Mexican Revolution (1910–1920). He proposed the cancellation of the under-construction
New Mexico City International Airport, the conversion of the president's official residence and office complex,
Los Pinos, into a cultural center, as well as
universal health care, free internet, and a sale of the presidential aircraft. López Obrador has offered to hold referendums on various issues, among them a performance evaluation halfway through his term during the
2021 legislative elections (instead of his former proposal of every two years)) that would cut his six-year term short if he lost the consultation. He proposed dispersing the cabinet throughout the
country's states, with the objective of "promoting development throughout the national territory," while the Presidency and the Ministries of
National Defense, the
Navy, the
Interior,
Foreign Affairs, and
Finance and Public Credit would remain in the capital.
New Airport for Mexico City Corruption, geological, and environmental problems related to the construction of
a new airport in Texcoco,
State of Mexico, were major issues during López Obrador's 2018 presidential campaign. After winning the election but before taking office, he sponsored a citizen referendum on replacing the Texcoco airport with rebuilding the military airport Santa Lucia in
Zumpango, State of Mexico. The referendum passed with 70% of the 1 million votes cast. Canceling the airport cost MXN 75 billion (US$3.98 billion). The new airport in Zumpango was named "
Felipe Ángeles International Airport", and construction began on 17 October 2019. The airport opened in March 2022.
Anti-corruption López Obrador's chief pledge was to eradicate institutional corruption by enacting constitutional laws and policies to make corruption more difficult. One example is two laws enacted that make corruption and voter fraud a criminal act without bail, as well as removing corrupt government officials with due process. López Obrador pledged a combination of zero tolerance and personal honesty to sweep it out "from top to bottom like cleaning the stairs." He also proposed to amend an article in the constitution to make it possible to try presidents for corruption.
Rocío Nahle García, his top energy adviser, has called for a freeze on future deepwater drilling auctions and a review of contracts with international oil companies. In February 2018, his business adviser,
Alfonso Romo, said, "[he] reviewed most of the oil tenders awarded to private drillers and found them to be beneficial for Mexico." He has also pledged to end oil exports to focus internally, as well as invest in refineries along with ending the importation of gasoline from the United States, saying the nation must recover energy self-sufficiency "as a principle of national security" and should make loss-making state refineries operable and assess biodiesel production. On 30 November 2018, López Obrador told the press that the previous administration's oil reforms, which permitted auctioning oil field rights to private companies, would not continue under his administration. Shortly after taking office, López Obrador cracked down on the robbery of motor fuels:
Huachicolero. Despite the 18 January 2019
Tlahuelilpan pipeline explosion that cost the lives of at least 119 in Tlahuelilpan, Hidalgo, and local fuel shortages, gasoline theft was cut by 95% from 81,000 barrels in November 2018 to 4,000 barrels in April 2019 with a savings of 11 billion pesos ($581 million). By 2023 Mexico plans to have seven oil refineries, including a new one that is being built at the Dos Bocas port in
Paraíso, Tabasco. Construction on the Dos Bocas refinery began in August 2019, with an estimated cost between US$6 billion and $8 billion.
Education With his saying, "" (Scholarship recipients, yes;
hitmen, no), López Obrador promised guaranteed schooling and employment to all young Mexicans, through universal access to public colleges, and proposed monthly scholarships of 2,400 MXN to low-income university students. López Obrador is against the educational reform passed into law in 2013, stating he opposes the use of standardized test scores as a basis for firing teachers, saying, "It is an ideological problem of the right, of conservatism; deep down they do not want public education, they want education to be privatized, that is the mentality that prevails in these people. I ask them to be serene and if you really want to help improve education, do not polarize or disqualify [the teachers]." He also argued that: "children go to school without eating and that is not addressed in the so-called education reform." The educational reform laws passed during the Peña Nieto administration were overturned in September 2019. The new laws promise to assess teachers' opinions and preserve the public nature of the school system.
Drug War As the
Mexican drug war that started under President Calderón (2006–12) dragged on into its 12th year, he reiterated his 2012 presidential run strategy of "
Abrazos, no balazos" (Hugs, not bullets), arguing that jobs and better wages, especially for younger people and the rural populace, are necessary to combat crime, not the use of more military force. for which he would seek the aid of international
NGOs,
Pope Francis, and
UN Secretary-General António Guterres. He declared that he would consider legalizing certain drugs as part of a broader strategy to fight poverty and crime. López Obrador declared an end to the Drug War, announcing that he wished to shift from capturing
capos (drug lords) to reducing violence and paying more attention to health and socioeconomic concerns. Nonetheless, the murder rate increased during his first year in office. López Obrador has sent the newly formed, militarized
National Guard to fight crime, but they have not been any more successful than previous police and military efforts. A major setback was a failed attempt to arrest
Ovidio Guzmán López in October 2019, which set off fierce
gun battles in
Culiacán, Sinaloa, and had to be called off. López Obrador later explained that his primary concern was saving lives. When three adults and six children, American citizens belonging to the
LeBaron family, were killed near the border between
Sinaloa and
Chihuahua, President
Donald Trump briefly threatened to declare the cartels terrorist organizations. López Obrador persuaded him not to do so.
Economic policy Lopez Obrador describes himself as an adherent of a
mixed economy. At an event on 3 June 2018, he explained that "there will be a mixed economy; the State with public investment could not face the challenge of growth in Mexico, private investment is required, and the social sector is also required." Based on his economic proposals, he wants the country to be "self-sufficient" and to "rescue the agriculture industry" affected by the
North American Free Trade Agreement. He has also doubled compensations to both, pensions to two million five hundred senior citizens, and the nation's
minimum wage. López Obrador has also created a special zone along Mexico's northern border with lower
value-added taxes, lower rent taxes, and a higher minimum wage. His advisers also said that the same measures could also be directed at Mexico's southern border and elsewhere to contain migration. He has planned a host of infrastructure projects in partnership with the private sector, including rail links in the
forests of Yucatán and across the
Isthmus of Tehuantepec, to spark economic growth in Mexico's economically depressed south. At a major banking conference in March 2018, he made promises to maintain economic stability and respect the autonomy of the
Bank of Mexico, saying: "We will support banks and we won't confiscate assets. There won't be expropriations or nationalizations."
NAFTA/USMCA López Obrador has criticized
NAFTA, arguing small Mexican corn farmers have been affected, as well as proposing to defend avocado farmers from agricultural tariffs. He has asked Peña Nieto's administration to postpone the current renegotiation of the agreement, arguing both Donald Trump and Peña Nieto do not have a strong, amicable relationship, tainted by a
cancelled foreign trip. During the general assembly of the American Chamber of Commerce in Mexico, he said he does not want the agreement cancelled, arguing it benefits the three member nations. In June 2018, during a presidential debate, he argued that if there is a failure in the NAFTA renegotiation, the domestic economy must be strengthened, saying, "[it] cannot be fatal for Mexicans, our country has a lot of natural resources, a lot of wealth." López Obrador has argued in favor of increasing workers' salaries "because wages in our country are very low; they are the lowest wages in the world and we need to strengthen the domestic market and improve the income of workers; you can not be paying the workers of the
maquilas 800 pesos a week." Mexico and the United States reached a new trade agreement on 27 August 2018, and Canada agreed on 30 September. The new trade agreement is called the
United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA). The USMCA increases environmental and labor regulations, and incentivizes the domestic production of cars and trucks. The agreement also provides updated intellectual property protections. Then-U.S. Trade Representative
Robert Lighthizer, Canadian Deputy Prime Minister
Chrystia Freeland, and
Deputy Minister for North America Jesús Seade Kuri signed a modified agreement in Mexico City on 10 December 2018. The
Mexican Senate ratified the treaty on 19 June 2019, the US on January 29, 2020 (Public Law No: 116–113), and Canada on March 13, 2020.
Fiscal policy Arguing he would be
fiscally conservative, López Obrador proposed raising social spending via proposed
austerity measures on politician and bureaucrat salaries and subsidies, including the president's salary and post-presidential pension, as well as fighting private corruption and tax fraud. López Obrador has reduced the presidential salary by 60% to MXN 108,000 (US$5,000) per month and has limited what public servants and judiciary members can earn. He opened the presidential housing complex of
Los Pinos to the public, taking up residence in the
National Palace. On top of this, he has sold off government assets, including vehicles and real estate; proceeds have gone to social programs for the poor. An austerity law passed in October 2019 restricts remodeling of government offices, bans government employees for ten years from working in private companies they regulated while in office, and cuts presidential pensions. The president flies commercial airlines, but has not yet found a buyer for the presidential airplane.
Foreign policy Following accusations by interest groups and the opposition, which have alleged influences by the Venezuelan government and drawn comparisons with Donald Trump, López Obrador stated, "No to
Chavismo, no to
Trumpismo; yes to
Juarismo, yes to
Maderismo, yes to
Cardenismo, yes to
Mexicanismo." He has repeatedly stated that he wants to continue the bilateral relationship with the United States based on mutual respect and friendship, "and not of subordination", insisting that "Mexico will not be a
piñata of any foreign government". He has also said, "we no longer want Mexico to be seen as a country of conquest, the looting is over." During a presidential debate, López Obrador argued that "the best foreign policy is domestic policy", in that if the country has no corruption and crime, it will help develop trust for investment and tourism because the image of Mexico would improve the perception of Mexico in the international arena. He has campaigned on Mexico's former foreign policy of
non-interventionism and the Principle of the self-determination of the peoples' nations, the
Estrada Doctrine, stated in the Mexican constitution, article 89. López Obrador reiterated his commitment to non-interventionism with the statement he made during his presidential victory speech, "We will be friends of all the world's people and governments. The principles of non-intervention, self-determination, and the peaceful settlement of disputes will be applied again." After the 2019 election victory in Argentina, López Obrador developed a close relationship with President
Alberto Fernández in what
El País described as a "progressive alliance", with Fernández making one of his first official trips abroad to Mexico The two countries later developed a closer bond in cooperation regarding the
COVID-19 vaccine. López Obrador also expressed support for Argentina's claim to the
Falkland Islands and has urged the United Kingdom to negotiate an end to the dispute with Argentina.
Immigration and U.S. policy in July 2018 As President
Donald Trump Donald_Trump_presidential_campaign,_2016#Comments_regarding_undocumented_immigrants|accused Mexican illegal immigrants of "bringing drugs [and] crime" during his presidential campaign, López Obrador took a stance against Trump's proposals for a
wall on the U.S.-Mexico border as well as the deportation of undocumented immigrants in the United States. In 2017, he called on the Peña Nieto administration to "[present] a lawsuit at the United Nations against the U.S. government for violation of human rights and racial discrimination". He promised to convert the 50 Mexican consulates in the United States into "procurators" for the defense of migrants, suggested appointing
Alicia Bárcena, current Executive Secretary of the
United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, as Mexico's permanent representative to the UN, and pledged to put pressure on the United States through organizations like the United Nations. He accused the establishment parties of the corruption that keeps migrants from receiving the support they need. Regarding migration to Mexico, he asserted his government would not "continue the dirty work" of the United States and detain Central American migrants at the country's southern border. Following his proposed idea of decentralizing the nation's cabinet away from Mexico City, he would move the
National Institute of Migration to
Tijuana,
Baja California. He suggested that the NAFTA renegotiations should create a development plan for Central America as a means to address emigration in the region, López Obrador said he wants to broker a deal with President Trump to stem
illegal immigration through jobs and development rather than a border wall. In October 2018, López Obrador declared
working visas for Central American immigrants. Days later, following the arrival of
Central American migrant caravans into Mexico en route to the United States, he asked for solidarity with the migrants.
Election results López Obrador won the election on 1 July 2018 with 53% of the popular vote–the first candidate to win an outright majority since
1988, and the first candidate not from the PRI or its predecessors to do so since the
Mexican Revolution. In terms of states won, López Obrador won in a landslide, carrying 31 out of 32 of the country's states. Ricardo Anaya also conceded defeat within an hour of the polls closing, and independent candidate Jaime Rodríguez Calderón recognized López Obrador's victory shortly afterward.
Presidential transition (July–December 2018) with President-elect López Obrador on 9 August 2018 López Obrador took office on 1 December 2018. When he was president-elect, he announced he would take a 60% salary pay cut. Before taking office, from 22 to 25 October, he held an impromptu vote, organized by supporters of his party, on whether or not the
New International Airport for Mexico City was to be scrapped, citing that the project was rife with corruption, cronyism, and a waste of taxpayer's money. About 70% of the results voted against the continuation of the project. López Obrador proposed expanding the
Santa Lucía Air Force Base instead. In December 2018, López Obrador ordered the creation of a truth commission to re-examine one of the country's most notorious unsolved crimes: the kidnapping and presumed murder of
43 trainee teachers who disappeared after an attack by cartel gunmen and police officers. After the 2018 presidential election, media organizations, including
Forbes, reported that López Obrador said the victory of his party, Morena, was "
La Cuarta Transformación" (The Fourth Transformation). The phrase is a reference to three major historical reforms, namely
Mexican independence, the
Reform War, and the
Mexican Revolution. ==Presidency (2018–2024)==