MEXICO CITY – At first, Mexico‘s government did its best to ignore Donald Trump. Then it likened him to Adolf Hitler. Now it has appointed a new ambassador to come up with a better plan.
Fed up with the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination labeling Mexico as a cradle of drug-runners, job poachers and rapists, the government is sending in respected diplomat Carlos Sada to lead a fightback.
Mexico’s new ambassador in Washington, Sada acknowledges his country has neglected its image across the border and aims to fix that with PR and media campaigns, and by lobbying prominent U.S. companies, lawmakers and civic leaders.
“We need to do a more thorough job so that people understand what (Mexico) contributes,” he said after he was sworn in at Mexico‘s Senate on Thursday.
Sada’s strategy includes underscoring Mexico‘s importance to the U.S. economy, although it centers on defending the rights of Mexican citizens in the United States and promoting Mexican culture.
That focus has fed doubts over whether the government is trying hard enough to win over its most important audience: American voters.
“It’s vital to improve Mexico‘s image and protect our people, but that’s not enough to change the hateful trend that Trump and other xenophobes before him have stirred up,” said Gabriela Cuevas, an opposition lawmaker with the conservative National Action Party (PAN), who chairs the Senate’s foreign relations committee.
“They don’t understand the extent of the damage Trump has done,” she said, urging the government to be more aggressive in mobilizing powerful U.S. interests against Trump’s attacks.
Claiming Mexico is “killing” the United States on trade, Trump has threatened to disrupt bilateral commerce worth some $500 billion a year, and promises to deport millions of undocumented migrants from Mexico and Central America.
To finance a border wall to keep migrants out, he has controversially proposed blocking billions of dollars in remittances sent home by Mexicans in the United States.
The measures would pose a serious threat to Mexico‘s economy, but for months Mexico‘s government disregarded Trump, hoping his candidacy would fizzle out.
“It’s the ostrich policy: head in the sand,” said Agustín Barrios Gómez, the head of Fundación Imagen Mexico, a group dedicated to promoting Mexico‘s image abroad.
Mexican officials say U.S. politicians and officials urged it to keep a low profile to avoid aggravating tensions, and played down the real estate magnate’s chances.
“The Republicans told us, ‘We’ll deal with Trump,’” one senior Mexican government official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
When Mexico eventually did respond, President Enrique Peña Nieto compared the brash billionaire’s campaign to the rise of Hitler and Benito Mussolini.
Mexican officials wince with embarrassment when reminded of the comment, arguing it was tactless and went too far.
EMPTY EMBASSY
As Trump railed against Mexico, the government should have made a concerted effort to remind key players in the United States that the two nations’ economic interests are closely intertwined, diplomats and business leaders say.
But over a dozen serving and former senior Mexican officials and lawmakers said it did not.
“They haven’t so far, but I do see the intention to do it again,” said Jaime Serra, a former trade minister who headed Mexico‘s negotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with the United States and Canada in the early 1990s.
Trump has not been the only one to criticize Mexico.
His Republican rival Ted Cruz also supports a border wall, and backs mass deportations of illegal immigrants.
Democratic hopeful Bernie Sanders has, like Trump, taken a protectionist line on jobs and says NAFTA was a mistake.
Mexico‘s cause was not helped by Peña Nieto leaving his diplomatic mission in Washington without an ambassador for six months just as Trump was warming up.
And his eventual choice surprised many: Miguel Basáñez, an old friend who had never worked in the diplomatic service.
“It was a bad decision from the start,” said a senior lawmaker inside Peña Nieto’s ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI. “They didn’t grasp the size of the problem.”
Basáñez was cast aside this month, just seven months into the job.
For Basáñez and now Sada, the task of promoting Mexico in the United States is complicated by problems at home.
Mexico‘s reputation has been hurt by relentless drugs violence, conflict-of-interest scandals in government and the apparent massacre of 43 trainee teachers by a drug cartel working with local police.
“To change the image, you have to change the reality,” said Andrés Rozental, a former deputy foreign minister responsible for North America. “Unfortunately, Mexico‘s internal reality at this point in time has a lot of negatives.”
DAVE GRAHAM