Trump’s Sur­pris­ing Friend­ship with Mex­i­co

Trump’s Surprising Friendship with Mexico

Trump’s Sur­pris­ing Friend­ship with Mex­i­co

The pres­i­dent has been ami­gos with Mex­i­can lead­ers since 2018.

Donald Trump with AMLO

Cred­it: Anna Mon­ey­mak­er-Pool/Get­ty Images

When Trump took office in 2016, bad rela­tions with Mex­i­co seemed pre­or­dained. Dur­ing the cam­paign, the pres­i­dent had lam­bast­ed the coun­try for its role in facil­i­tat­ing ille­gal immi­gra­tion to the U.S., famous­ly say­ing that “When Mex­i­co sends its peo­ple, they’re not send­ing their best…. They’re bring­ing drugs. They’re bring­ing crime. They’re rapists.” One of the sig­na­ture planks of his cam­paign pro­gram was to build a wall on the south­ern bor­der and “make Mex­i­co pay for it.”

So it was no sur­prise that the new­ly-elect­ed pres­i­dent got along poor­ly with Mexico’s then-Pres­i­dent Enrique Peña Nieto. Peña Nieto large­ly avoid­ed con­fronting Trump where pos­si­ble, but the Mex­i­can president’s per­ceived pas­siv­i­ty made him mas­sive­ly unpop­u­lar among his coun­try­men. Even­tu­al­ly, Peña Nieto backed away from engag­ing with the U.S. entire­ly, can­celling meet­ings with the pres­i­dent mul­ti­ple times over what was viewed in Mex­i­co as unac­cept­ably aggres­sive rhetoric.

When Peña Nieto’s term end­ed in 2018, how­ev­er, a new polit­i­cal force swept Mex­i­co. The bois­ter­ous left-wing pop­ulist Andrés Manuel López Obrador, pop­u­lar­ly known as AMLO, seized con­trol of the coun­try in a land­slide, win­ning every sin­gle Mex­i­can state but one and beat­ing his clos­est com­peti­tor by more than 30 per­cent. His elec­toral coali­tion, led by his own polit­i­cal par­ty More­na, won majori­ties in both the Mex­i­can Sen­ate and Cham­ber of Deputies, grant­i­ng him con­trol over the entire Mex­i­can fed­er­al gov­ern­ment. 

López Obrador cam­paigned on tak­ing a more con­fronta­tion­al stance with the U.S., con­trast­ing him­self with the wide­ly dis­liked Peña Nieto. Dur­ing the run-up to the elec­tion, he spoke harsh­ly against Trump specif­i­cal­ly, say­ing that the pres­i­dent was run­ning “a neo­fas­cist cam­paign of hate” and going so far as to ref­er­ence him in com­par­i­son with Hitler. With his brash, aggres­sive style and unabashed­ly patri­ot­ic mes­sage, many com­men­ta­tors expect­ed a clash of per­son­al­i­ties across the U.S.–Mexico bor­der.

What they got instead came to many com­men­ta­tors as a sur­prise. After tak­ing office in Decem­ber of 2018, López Obrador not only avoid­ed con­fronting Trump, he became down­right friend­ly with his Amer­i­can coun­ter­part. In 2019, after Trump threat­ened to imple­ment esca­lat­ing tar­iffs on Mex­i­can exports to the U.S. over ille­gal immi­gra­tion and crime spilling over the south­ern bor­der, López Obrador made an agree­ment with the U.S. that estab­lished the Remain in Mex­i­co pol­i­cy, where asy­lum appli­cants would wait in Mex­i­co until they could be processed by courts rather than being released into the U.S. López Obrador also deployed the Mex­i­can Nation­al Guard to turn back migrants and reduce immi­gra­tion flows into the U.S. from out­side Mex­i­co. 

The approach, unex­pect­ed as it was, worked well for López Obrador. By the end of 2019, Trump was call­ing López Obrador “a man who I like and respect” and had large­ly put aside his more extreme demands on the Mex­i­can gov­ern­ment, includ­ing the demand for Mex­i­co to pay for the U.S. bor­der wall. In 2020, López Obrador made his first trip out­side the country—to meet with Don­ald Trump in Wash­ing­ton, DC. There, the Mex­i­can pres­i­dent praised Trump and said that he had “not attempt­ed to treat our coun­try like a colony, but on the con­trary has hon­ored our con­di­tion as an inde­pen­dent nation… [Pres­i­dent Trump] has behaved with respect and cour­tesy towards us.” Trump, in response, said that it was “a pro­found priv­i­lege to have [López Obrador] as my friend” and called Mex­i­cans “won­der­ful peo­ple.”

The sur­pris­ing friend­ship between the two pop­ulists from oppo­site sides of the bor­der and the polit­i­cal spec­trum raised eye­brows in both the U.S. and in Mex­i­co. In the U.S., lib­er­als like those at the New York Times deplored what they con­sid­ered Mexico’s inhu­mane efforts to tamp down on ille­gal immi­gra­tion result­ing from Trump and López Obrador’s 2019 agree­ment. In Mex­i­co, it pro­voked bit­ter accu­sa­tions that López Obrador was sell­ing out to Trump. But what­ev­er the rea­son for the accord between the two presidents—whether it was a result of hard polit­i­cal cal­cu­la­tion, or sim­ply the mutu­al respect and under­stand­ing aris­ing from sim­i­lar­i­ties in tem­pera­ment and polit­i­cal style—the rela­tion­ship was quite suc­cess­ful. López Obrador avoid­ed the destruc­tive eco­nom­ic penal­ties threat­ened by Trump, suc­cess­ful­ly imple­ment­ed the USMCA free trade agree­ment, and even con­vinced Trump to help bail out Mexico’s strug­gling oil indus­try in 2020. By the end of his first term in 2020, Trump, on the oth­er hand, sig­nif­i­cant­ly reduced ille­gal immi­gra­tion with the help of Mex­i­can troops and the Remain in Mex­i­co asy­lum pol­i­cy.

Trump’s return to office in 2024 pre­sent­ed anoth­er chal­lenge for the U.S.-Mexico rela­tion­ship. López Obrador’s six-year term end­ed in 2024, and—leaving office an immense­ly pop­u­lar president—he turned the reins of his polit­i­cal move­ment over to Clau­dia Shein­baum, an ear­ly sup­port­er who at the time served as the head of the gov­ern­ment of Mex­i­co City. There was con­sid­er­able spec­u­la­tion that Shein­baum, unlike her pre­de­ces­sor, would not get along well with Trump.

There was good rea­son to be skep­ti­cal. Shein­baum is in many ways a sharp con­trast to López Obrador. Where López Obrador is a bom­bas­tic pop­ulist, prone to provo­ca­tion and rhetor­i­cal aggres­sion, Sheinbaum’s polit­i­cal style is calm, qui­et, and ana­lyt­i­cal. López Obrador pre­ferred to paint in broad ide­o­log­i­cal strokes; Shein­baum speaks read­i­ly the lan­guage of tech­noc­ra­cy and pol­i­cy. López Obrador comes from a poor, rur­al, indige­nous back­ground in south­ern Mex­i­co; Shein­baum is a sec­u­lar Mex­i­can Jew whose par­ents were aca­d­e­mics in urban Mex­i­co City. López Obrador’s polit­i­cal pro­gram was het­ero­dox and focused on eco­nom­ic uplift; Shein­baum made a name for her­self as some­thing of a cul­ture war­rior, sup­port­ing fem­i­nist ini­tia­tives and con­tro­ver­sial­ly dis­man­tling a stat­ue of Colum­bus dur­ing her term as head of gov­ern­ment in the cap­i­tal as part of a “decol­o­niza­tion” project. Would some­one of her ide­o­log­i­cal bent real­ly be coop­er­a­tive with Don­ald Trump?

As it turns out, the answer is yes. López Obrador may have cho­sen a politi­cian very dif­fer­ent from him­self to suc­ceed him in wear­ing the ban­da pres­i­den­cial of Mex­i­co, but he left the coun­try in hands no less adept at man­ag­ing Mexico’s rela­tion­ship with the U.S. Shein­baum, like López Obrador, is well aware that Mexico’s well-being depends on its eco­nom­ic inte­gra­tion with the U.S. She has tak­en the oppor­tu­ni­ty to show her qual­i­ty as an immense­ly tal­ent­ed diplo­mat and politi­cian, bal­anc­ing Amer­i­can demands laid out by Trump on mat­ters rang­ing from immi­gra­tion to trade with the domes­tic polit­i­cal require­ment to main­tain a strict sense of polit­i­cal sov­er­eign­ty and inde­pen­dence from Amer­i­can influ­ence.

One of Trump’s first moves dur­ing his sec­ond term was to begin threat­en­ing Mex­i­co with major tar­iffs if the Mex­i­can gov­ern­ment did not crack down on con­trol­ling immi­gra­tion and drug traf­fick­ing across the bor­der. As in 2016, immi­gra­tion and crime were major themes in his elec­toral vic­to­ry in 2024, and just as in his pre­vi­ous term, lever­ag­ing eco­nom­ic threats promised to be a quick and sim­ple way to address one of Trump’s major pri­or­i­ties. The threats were tak­en bad­ly by the Mex­i­can peo­ple, who have always resent­ed Amer­i­can inter­fer­ence in their domes­tic pol­i­tics, and there was pres­sure for Shein­baum to impose retal­ia­to­ry tar­iffs. Instead, like López Obrador before her, she struck a deal to clamp down on the bor­der with the Nation­al Guard—something that cost Mex­i­co lit­tle, as the coun­try already had an agree­ment in place with the Biden admin­is­tra­tion that was laid out on much the same lines. The result was pleas­ing for both par­ties: Trump got to declare that Mex­i­co had bent the knee and would be work­ing on reduc­ing crime and immi­gra­tion across the bor­der, while Shein­baum was able to inform her domes­tic audi­ence that she had held the line and not grant­ed fur­ther con­ces­sions in the face of Trump’s tar­iff threats.

For many politi­cians, this would have been enough, but Shein­baum has made it clear that not only is she will­ing to strike deals with Trump, she’s will­ing to active­ly work with the U.S. on Trump’s major pri­or­i­ties. After announc­ing the deal, Shein­baum has worked hard to demon­strate Mexico’s efforts to increase bor­der secu­ri­ty, dra­mat­i­cal­ly increas­ing arrests and the seizure of drugs head­ing for the U.S. She even took the unprece­dent­ed step of extra­dit­ing 29 drug king­pins from Mex­i­can pris­ons to face jus­tice before Amer­i­can tri­bunals, and it is sus­pect­ed that per­haps 40 more will be hand­ed over and placed in Amer­i­can cus­tody in the com­ing weeks.

Indeed, in the face of every tar­iff threat and Trumpian men­ace, Shein­baum has been char­ac­ter­is­ti­cal­ly lev­el-head­ed, cour­te­ous, and coop­er­a­tive. Even where tar­iffs have been imposed, as in the case of steel, alu­minum, and motor vehi­cles, she has tak­en the route of nego­ti­a­tion, send­ing her sec­re­tary of the econ­o­my, Marce­lo Ebrard, to Wash­ing­ton to try to work out more favor­able terms. As a result, the U.S. and Mex­i­co have had a strong work­ing rela­tion­ship dur­ing Trump’s sec­ond term: Mex­i­co has avoid­ed both puni­tive tar­iffs and the rec­i­p­ro­cal tar­iffs imposed by Trump on Lib­er­a­tion Day, plac­ing it in a rel­a­tive­ly advan­ta­geous posi­tion for investors and com­pa­nies look­ing to retool their sup­ply chains.

Trump, for his part, seems to rec­og­nize that Shein­baum is a good nego­ti­at­ing part­ner and an impres­sive politi­cian. “Pres­i­dent Shein­baum is a ter­rif­ic per­son, a fan­tas­tic woman,” he said on Thurs­day. “We’ve had many con­ver­sa­tions. She is a very elegant—and just a fan­tas­tic per­son.”

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