The News
Sunday 22 of December 2024

Mexico Disappointed at Peña Nieto Meeting with Trump


Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto and Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump shake hands after a joint statement at Los Pinos, the presidential official residence, in Mexico City, Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2016,photo: AP/Marco Ugarte
Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto and Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump shake hands after a joint statement at Los Pinos, the presidential official residence, in Mexico City, Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2016,photo: AP/Marco Ugarte
The Mexican president's failure to ask for an apology from Trump over racist comments about Mexicans will likely further damage his popularity

 

MEXICO CITY — Mexicans responded angrily to what they saw as a weak performance by President Enrique Peña Nieto, who appeared to let Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump emerge unscathed from a meeting Wednesday.

Peña Nieto tried gamely to take the high road and avoid arguing with Trump, who didn’t waver an inch in his plans to build a wall along the two countries’ border.

Trump called Mexican-Americans “spectacular” and “amazing,” and Peña Nieto mentioned disagreements and the fact that Mexicans felt “aggrieved,” but Mexico’s president never did what people here wanted most: demand that Trump apologize for suggesting that many Mexican migrants were rapists or criminals.

Mexico security analyst Alejandro Hope called the meeting “a disaster.”

“Trump didn’t alter his positions one little bit,” Hope said. “He just dressed them up a little in less incendiary language.” Of Peña Nieto, Hope said “in the end, he gave Trump an opportunity to show off, while getting nothing in return. Good work, guys.”

Trump “came for a photo op and Enrique Peña Nieto allowed himself to be used to benefit his (Trump’s) campaign,” said columnist Jorge Zepeda.

Trump’s contention that illegal immigration and the flight of manufacturing jobs were hurting Mexicans too did little to win hearts and minds south of the border.

Trump “came to repeat his ideas without negotiating,” Mexico City security analyst Raúl Benítez said. “What a ridiculous visit.”

News anchor Carlos Loret de Mola tweeted grimly, “Trump can leave in peace. The humiliation has been carried out.”

And writer Ángeles Mastretta wrote in her Twitter account, “what was expected: a president who isn’t capable of demanding apologies … how sad.”

Protesters at the iconic Angel of Independence on Avenida Reforma. Photo: The News
Anti-Trump protesters at the Angel of Independence on Avenida Reforma. Photo: The News

On the whole, Mexicans reacted with disappointment and disgust that Trump had even been invited. After all, Mexicans have already made — and beaten to pulp — piñatas of Trump. They created a video game in which players can throw soccer balls, cactus leaves and tequila bottles at a cartoon image of Trump.

But when the man himself came to Mexico, he was treated with kid gloves and given a warm reception at the presidential residence. The damage didn’t accrue to Trump, but it may well hurt Peña Nieto, whose popularity is already at an all-time low near 20 percent, according to recent polls.

Artist Arturo Meade joined one of the few small protests prior to the meeting with his 2 ½-year old son Mariano, and shook his head in disgust.

“This is an insult and a betrayal,” Meade said. “What can this meeting bring us, except surrealism in all its splendor?”

Former President Vicente Fox told local media that Trump was trying to boost his sagging campaign. “He fooled him (Peña Nieto) … he’s using him to try to recover lost votes.”

Many Mexicans felt the Republican candidate had left Peña Nieto flat-footed by accepting an invitation the Mexican president had made simply for appearances’ sake.

The newspaper El Universal wrote in an editorial that Trump “caught Mexican diplomats off guard” by accepting the invitation, and “got one step ahead of them.”

“They wanted to invite Hillary (Clinton), but that meant inviting both of them and nobody thought Trump would accept first,” said Hope. “What’s in it for Mexico? Here there’s nothing to gain. The upside is all for Trump.”

Historically, the golden rule of Mexico’s foreign policy has been to avoid being seen as taking sides in U.S. politics; hence the two invitations, even though Mexico favors Hillary Clinton’s position on a path to citizenship for migrants.

Peña Nieto acknowledged he had invited both candidates, and said he did it because “I believe in dialogue to promote Mexico’s interests and above all to protect Mexicans everywhere.”

Abraham Garnica, 31, who works as an engineer in Mexico City, was left like most Mexicans, scratching his head while trying to think of a reason why Peña Nieto might have agreed to the meeting.

“They must be afraid he might win, and so they’re saying, ‘Just in case, we’ll shake his hand,’” Garnica said. “I myself, I wouldn’t have invited him.”

Yolanda Herrera, a 66-year-old Mexico City housewife, sought glumly to put the best light on what, to many, felt like a national humiliation.

“Let’s hope that … he sees that he was really wrong about what he said,” Herrera said of Trump. “I think this is a display of the fact that we Mexicans are a very sympathetic people.”

MARK STEVENSON
MARIA VERZA