From AMLO to Trump: ‘I Am Not Cowardly Nor Timid’

Published in Milenio
(Mexico) on 31 May 2019
by Joaquín López-Dóriga (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Patricia Simoni. Edited by Denile Doyle.
Yesterday was a red-letter day: The T-MEC* passed the Mexican Senate, the Canadian Parliament, and the U.S. Congress.

In the morning, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador announced he was sending the initiative to the Senate, while Ricardo Monreal worked with legal coordinators to convene a special session for approval on Tuesday, June 18. Canadian Premier Justin Trudeau sent the initiative to his parliament in Ottawa and Donald Trump sent the draft document to Congress for discussion and approval within 30 days.

But in the midst of those happy and simultaneous processes, Trump announced a spectacular measure against immigration that has nothing to do with closing the border.

At 2 p.m. on Radio Fórmula, Undersecretary Jesús Seade confessed that he was fascinated — and rightly so — by the turn of events in this stalled process and the decision to eliminate tariffs on Mexican and Canadian steel and aluminum, which had been an insurmountable obstacle to negotiation.

We were still celebrating, when The Washington Post announced that Trump was going to impose a 5% tariff on all Mexican imports. Trump confirmed this on Twitter, saying that this tax would increase progressively up to 25% until the immigration problem is resolved.

The announcement was a blow, that Seade, himself at dusk described as disastrous.

Faced with this aggressive move by Trump, coming at a time when President Lopez Obrador was expected to speak in his usual nonconfrontational way about the situation, AMLO sent an unusually forceful message.

He said that social problems are not resolved by taxes or coercive measures, that the policy of America First is false. “I propose to deepen the dialogue ... and, please, remember that I do not lack courage, that I am not cowardly nor timid but that I act on principles,” the president said.

In short, his message proposes a high-level mission, led by Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard, to be welcomed in Washington today in order to reach an agreement for the benefit of the two nations.

That's what we wanted. Energy and dignity.

* Translator's Note: Tratado entre México, Estados Unidos y Canadá refers to the updated free trade agreement to replace NAFTA.In Mexico, it is called the “T-MEC” (Tratado entre México, Estados Unidos y Canadá); in Canada, it is called CUSMA for the Canada, United States and Mexico Agreement, and the United States refers to it as the USMCA for the United States, Mexico and Canada Agreement.


Ayer era un día de ensueño: el T-MEC transitaba en el Senado, en México; en el Parlamento en Canadá, y en el Congreso en Estados Unidos.

Por la mañana, el presidente Andrés Manuel López Obrador daba a conocer el envío de la iniciativa al Senado y a esa misma hora Ricardo Monreal operaba con los coordinadores de las bancadas la convocatoria a un periodo extraordinario para aprobarlo el martes 18 de junio, el premier canadiense, Justin Trudeau, mandaba la iniciativa a su Parlamento en Ottawa, y Donald Trump enviaba al Congreso el borrador del documento para que lo discutieran y aprobaran en 30 días.

Pero en medio de esos felices procesos simultáneos, Trump subía un tuit que anunciaba una medida espectacular contra la migración que no tiene que ver con el cierre de la frontera.

A las 2 de la tarde, en Radio Fórmula el subsecretario Jesús Seade se confesó fascinado, y con toda razón, por el vuelco a este proceso que se había estancado y por la decisión de haber eliminado los aranceles al acero y aluminios mexicanos y canadienses, que eran un obstáculo insuperable para la negociación.

Estábamos en esa fiesta cuando el Washington Post adelantó que Trump iba a gravar todas las importaciones mexicanas con un 5 por ciento de aranceles, lo que confirmaría él mismo vía tuiter diciendo que ese gravamen sería progresivo hasta 25 por ciento, hasta que resolviera el problema de la migración.
El anuncio fue un mazazo, que el mismo Seade, al anochecer calificó de algo desastroso.

Ante esta agresión de Trump, y cuando se esperaba que el presidente López Obrador se pronunciaría hasta hoy con el habitual yo no me quiero confrontar, y respeto, anoche le envió una carta en un tono, que por enérgico, no se le conocía en esta relación.

Le dice que los problemas sociales no se resuelven con impuestos ni con medidas coercitivas. (…) el lema Estados Unidos Primero es una falacia. (… ) le propongo profundizar en el diálogo y por favor recuerde que no me falta valor, que no soy un cobarde ni timorato, sino que actúo por principios.

Y al final le propone que reciban a la misión de alto nivel que, encabezada por el canciller Marcelo Ebrard, a partir de hoy estará en Washington para llegar a un acuerdo en beneficio de las dos naciones.

Eso es lo que queríamos: energía y dignidad.
This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Topics

Poland: Meloni in the White House. Has Trump Forgotten Poland?*

Germany: US Companies in Tariff Crisis: Planning Impossible, Price Increases Necessary

Japan: US Administration Losing Credibility 3 Months into Policy of Threats

Mauritius: Could Trump Be Leading the World into Recession?

India: World in Flux: India Must See Bigger Trade Picture

Palestine: US vs. Ansarallah: Will Trump Launch a Ground War in Yemen for Israel?

Ukraine: Trump Faces Uneasy Choices on Russia’s War as His ‘Compromise Strategy’ Is Failing

Related Articles

Poland: Meloni in the White House. Has Trump Forgotten Poland?*

Germany: US Companies in Tariff Crisis: Planning Impossible, Price Increases Necessary

Japan: US Administration Losing Credibility 3 Months into Policy of Threats

Mauritius: Could Trump Be Leading the World into Recession?

India: World in Flux: India Must See Bigger Trade Picture