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A New Hope For Mexico

Saying No to Corruption, Violence, and Trump's Wall

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"THERE ARE NO PROBLEMS WE CAN'T ADDRESS . . . WHOEVER MAY OCCUPY THE WHITE HOUSE."
"I'm not going to limit myself to condemning corruption and calling for its eradication; I also want to set out . . . a new politics, a different economic model, and the strengthening of cultural, moral, and spiritual values that can revitalize our nation."
Andrés Manuel López Obrador's (AMLO) stunning victory in the Mexican presidential election signals the end of decades of conservative government and the promise of fairer, more honest politics south of the Rio Grande.
AMLO's landslide success was built on a campaign that pledged to tackle corruption, halt privatization of the energy industry, invest in education and infrastructure, open a dialogue with the country's drug cartels, and oppose Trump's border wall.
Mexicans have responded to this platform with a resounding "¡Sí!" Now, AMLO will make a reality of the bold vision set out in A New Hope for Mexico.
"We will strive tirelessly to convince the US government that fellowship, without walls or borders, is the best approach . . . we want no more families separated and no more bones in the Arizona desert."
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    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2018
      "Confronted with Trump's orders to persecute migrants, we must join together to denounce his human rights violations": Mexico's president-elect delivers a few choice words for his counterpart north of the border.In this collection of campaign-trail speeches and articles, leftist politician López Obrador offers a program for--well, making Mexico great again, inasmuch as a long reign of neoliberalism has left it "one of the poorest countries on the continent." One of the effects is that Mexico's rural poor have had to look to the north for jobs, which in turn has occasioned the rise of nativist politics in the U.S. When candidate Trump thundered that Mexico wasn't "sending their best," the author gained a convenient foil, accusing Trump of ignorance and demagoguery. "Mexico does not 'send' anyone to the United States," he writes, adding that the Mexican and U.S. economies are so closely bound that protectionist policies will only harm American consumers, to say nothing of the elites who supported Trump. On a more purely domestic note, López Obrador holds that corruption is "Mexico's central problem" and pledges to uproot it. Moreover, he adds by way of a promise that he must now fulfill, by 2024--the end of his six-year term--a less corrupt Mexico will have posted a 6 percent growth rate, while "we will have created a new way of thinking, a revolution in conscience that will prevent avarice, corruption, and greed from prevailing over truth, morality, and fraternity." The high-flown rhetoric notwithstanding--and a cynic might observe that such fine words have been heard before from a governing class that the author calls "a gang of plunderers"--López Obrador gets down to cases with table-heavy pieces showing how former presidents soak the system with fat pensions and protections, how net migration flows have operated in the last 50 years, and the like.A book of promises and projections that, now that López Obrador has proved victorious, becomes a checklist for action.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2018
      "Confronted with Trump's orders to persecute migrants, we must join together to denounce his human rights violations": Mexico's president-elect delivers a few choice words for his counterpart north of the border.In this collection of campaign-trail speeches and articles, leftist politician L�pez Obrador offers a program for--well, making Mexico great again, inasmuch as a long reign of neoliberalism has left it "one of the poorest countries on the continent." One of the effects is that Mexico's rural poor have had to look to the north for jobs, which in turn has occasioned the rise of nativist politics in the U.S. When candidate Trump thundered that Mexico wasn't "sending their best," the author gained a convenient foil, accusing Trump of ignorance and demagoguery. "Mexico does not 'send' anyone to the United States," he writes, adding that the Mexican and U.S. economies are so closely bound that protectionist policies will only harm American consumers, to say nothing of the elites who supported Trump. On a more purely domestic note, L�pez Obrador holds that corruption is "Mexico's central problem" and pledges to uproot it. Moreover, he adds by way of a promise that he must now fulfill, by 2024--the end of his six-year term--a less corrupt Mexico will have posted a 6 percent growth rate, while "we will have created a new way of thinking, a revolution in conscience that will prevent avarice, corruption, and greed from prevailing over truth, morality, and fraternity." The high-flown rhetoric notwithstanding--and a cynic might observe that such fine words have been heard before from a governing class that the author calls "a gang of plunderers"--L�pez Obrador gets down to cases with table-heavy pieces showing how former presidents soak the system with fat pensions and protections, how net migration flows have operated in the last 50 years, and the like.A book of promises and projections that, now that L�pez Obrador has proved victorious, becomes a checklist for action.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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