Mexican president cancels summit with Trump
MEXICO CITY: Mexico’s president on Thursday scrapped a planned summit with Donald Trump in the face of insistent tweets from the US president demanding Mexico pay for a border wall, a spat that threatens Mexican efforts to salvage trade ties.
Taking a page out of Mr Trump’s playbook, President Enrique Pena Nieto fired the salvo on Twitter, after Trump’s call for Mexico to foot the bill for his planned wall prompted a groundswell of calls in Mexico for next week’s meeting to be called off.
Trump said in a Twitter message earlier on Thursday that his Mexican counterpart should cancel his scheduled visit to Washington if Mexico refuses to pay for the wall that he has ordered constructed along the border. Trump views the wall, a major part of his election campaign, as part of a package of measures to curb illegal immigration.
Relations have been frayed since Trump launched his campaign in 2015, characterising Mexican migrants as murderers and rapists and pledging to build a wall that he said Mexico would pay for. Mexico has long said it will not pay for the wall.
Trade ties are in the balance after Donald Trump vowed to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) and slap high tariffs on American companies that have moved jobs south of the border. Mexico’s peso extended losses to one per cent after Pena Nieto fired off his tweet.
“The US has a 60-billion-dollar trade deficit with Mexico. It has been a one-sided deal from the beginning of Nafta with massive numbers... of jobs and companies lost.
If Mexico is unwilling to pay for the badly needed wall, then it would be better to cancel the upcoming meeting,” Trump said on Twitter.
On Thursday, leaders of the Republican-controlled US Congress said they planned to move ahead on funding the border wall, which they projected would cost between $12 billion and $15 billion. Trump said in an interview with ABC News on Wednesday evening that Mexico would eventually reimburse the United States for the wall.
Trump signed the executive orders, including one authorising the planned wall, on Wednesday just as a Mexican delegation, led by Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray, arrived at the White House.
The timing caused outrage in Mexico, with prominent politicians and many on social media seeing it as a deliberate snub to the government’s efforts to engage with Trump, who has for months used Mexico as a political punching bag.
Published in Dawn, January 27th, 2017