mexico

Trump now warns 'something' must be done with Mexico

After the U.S. bombed Venezuela in the middle of the night and abducted President Nicolas Maduro, President Donald Trump was quick to threaten legitimately-elected governments in the region. In particular, Trump implied a hazy future conflict with Mexico in an interview with Fox News Saturday morning.

“So, was this operation a message that you’re sending to Mexico, to Claudia Sheinbaum, the president there?” Fox’s Griff Jenkins asked.

“Well, it wasn’t meant to be, we’re very friendly with her, she’s a good woman,” Trump said, “but the cartels are running Mexico. She’s not running Mexico. We could be politically correct and be nice and say, ‘Oh, yes, she is.’ No, no. She’s very, you know, she’s very frightened of the cartels. They’re running Mexico. And I’ve asked her numerous times, ‘Would you like us to take out the cartels?’ ... Something is gonna have to be done with Mexico.”

Social media wasted no time reacting to Trump’s proposition of interfering with the government of a U.S. ally.

“The atmosphere in which The World Cup will be held in less than 6 months' time in Mexico, USA & Canada. Is he going to 'capture' her too??!” said BAFTA-winning filmmaker Sara Afshar on X.

“Polls showed Americans were already quite uncertain about invading Venezuela,” said CNN reporter Aaron Blake on X. “Just hours later, Trump is talking about strikes in Mexico, too.”

Democratic candidate Fred Wellman slammed the Republican-dominated Congress for making Trump’s unilateral moves possible in the first place.

“This is what happens when the Executive is unchecked by Congress,” Wellman said on X. “He is empowered to do whatever he wants. He knows the Doormat Congress will do whatever he wants so now he is talking about attacking our ally and neighbor because no one will say ‘no.’"

New York Health Executive Director Melanie D’Arrigo questioned the president’s motivations, arguing, “if Trump cared about drugs he wouldn’t have pardoned the Silk Road founder whose online platform let drug dealers sell more than $200 million in illegal drugs … or the former President of Honduras, convicted of conspiring to import over 400 tons of cocaine into the U.S. … and dozens of other drug traffickers.”

Other critics were more nihilistic, with one posting “Mexico is next on the list. They don’t have oil, but they do have avocados.”

Republicans ban GOP rep from international travel after 'alcohol-related episode': report

House Republican leadership recently took action to bar one of their own members from international trips, according to a new report.

Punchbowl News reported Wednesday that GOP leaders decided to ban Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) from traveling for three months due to an "alcohol-related episode" in Mexico this summer. In details laid out by Punchbowl reporter Andrew Desiderio, the original incident took place while Crenshaw and other Republicans were on an official Congressional delegation (CODEL) visit to Mexico in August, and Crenshaw was "having drinks with a group of Mexican officials."

"One Mexican official cracked a crude joke that made a woman present uncomfortable. Crenshaw toasted the remarks," Desiderio wrote on his X account.

Following the August CODEL, Crenshaw reportedly met with House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and House Intelligence Committee chairman Rick Crawford. (R-Ark.) Desiderio's sources told him that the meeting grew "heated," and that Crawford apparently wanted Crenshaw kicked off of the prestigious committee.

Johnson reportedly didn't strip Crenshaw of his seat on the committee, though the Texas Republican was banned from international travel for 90 days. Crenshaw's cartel task force was also disbanded.

Desiderio further reported that Crenshaw and Crawford were squabbling over appropriations for counterintelligence programs in the annual legislation to fund intelligence agencies. Crawford had been pushing for additional funding, and was reportedly "frustrated with Crenshaw’s lack of support for the plan." Those funds were ultimately included in the version of the bill that reached the House floor.

Click here to read Punchbowl's full report (subscription required).

Trump scrambling to 'work something out' with Canada and Mexico after markets melt down

Ever since President Donald Trump announced new tariffs on the United States' neighbors, financial markets have been reeling. His administration is now signaling that Trump may be willing to somewhat back off from the new duty fees soon if he can work out a deal.

NBC News reported Tuesday that Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is now indicating that Trump may be willing to meet the leaders of Canada and Mexico "in the middle" following two consecutive disastrous days of trading. Lutnick's announcement that Trump would "probably" consider a compromise came after Trump re-introduced 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico after previously walking them back.

"Both the Mexicans and the Canadians are on the phone with me all day today, trying to show that they’ll do better," the commerce secretary told Fox Business. "And the president is listening because, you know, he’s very, very fair and very reasonable. So I think he’s going to work something out with them."

READ MORE: Trump plows forward with massive tax hike on ordinary Americans as economic warnings flash red

Trump's desire to bring Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum to the negotiating table comes on the heels of the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropping by more than 1,300 points over the past 48 hours. CNBC reported that the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite also posted losses, with the former seeing its biggest one-day drop since December this week.

It initially appeared as if the U.S. was poised for a crippling trade war with Canada, as Trudeau said he intended to add a retaliatory 25% tariff to imported American goods. Trump responded that if Trudeau imposed new tariffs, he would hit Canada again with subsequent duty fees. "Shark Tank" star Kevin O'Leary told Fox News this week that the threat of a trade war spooked investors, as the higher prices that the tariffs would bring would result in consumer spending trending downward.

The threat of new tariffs could also result in Americans delaying expensive purchases, like buying new vehicles. Flavio Volpe, who is the president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association, recently said that the tariffs would not only raise prices, but also endanger jobs both in the U.S. and in Canada.

"[Manufacturers] can't go buy a crank shaft or car seats at a Walmart," Volpe told Canada's CTV News. "So, the industry, like it did in those first two incidents, will close within a week and that includes Ontario and Michigan all the way down to Kentucky, Alabama and Texas."

READ MORE: Auto Association says plants 'will close within a week' thanks to Trump tariffs

Click here to read NBC's report in full.

'So little planning': Experts mock Trump after Mexico refuses to let deportation flight land

For years, Mexico has allowed the United States' deportation flights to cross over its airspace when flying undocumented immigrants back to their home countries without incident. But that's apparently no longer the case, according to a new report.

On Friday, NBC News found that Mexico refused a U.S. military plane access to its airspace when flying migrants to Guatemala. And as American Immigration Council senior fellow Aaron Reichlin-Melnick noted, another Central American country appears to have also not allowed the United States to fly over its airspace, given the flight's unusually circuitous route.

"This deportation flight had to go all the way around the Yucatan first, and then it went through Costa Rica, suggesting Honduras may also have denied permission," Reichlin-Melnick posted to Bluesky. He observed that countries declining to accommodate the U.S. by granting it access to its airspace could be a result of them perceiving his use of military C-130 planes "as an insult."

READ MORE: 'Quickly get into problems': These 3 obstacles could slow down Trump's mass deportations

As Virginia Commonwealth University associate political science professor Michael Paarlberg wrote on Bluesky, carrying out deportations requires both the country deporting migrants and the country accepting them to coordinate. And as the Washington Post reported in December, countries refusing to cooperate with Trump could throw a wrench in the gears of his mass deportation plans.

"It should be obvious, but doesn’t seem widely understood that the US can’t unilaterally deport people," Paarlberg explained. "This gives those countries a degree of leverage over the US if they simply refuse, as Mexico just did."

Author Jeff Pearlman worried that Trump's actions could "start a war" with either one of the United States' neighboring countries. And Moderna engineer Kenneth Trease predicted that should Trump fail to obtain the cooperation of migrants' countries of origin, it could lead to myriad issues down the road for both the Trump administration and the migrants themselves.

"Nonzero chance they did so little planning that they can't handle the scenario of 'what if Mexico won't let the planes land' and they don't have any backup plan for housing the deportees and they just wind up either in regular prison or eventually released to the street," Trease wrote.

READ MORE: Trump team pushing 'utter propaganda' to create 'climate of fear': experts

In a thread posted to X, Maryville College history professor Aaron Astor explained that Mexico refusing the deportation flight could be the start of greater tension between the U.S. and its neighbor to the south. Astor emphasized that he wasn't sure if the refusal was "kabuki theater" and "negotiation over terms of a new 'Remain in Mexico' plan" or "the beginning of something much more serious" that could have "huge economic consequences on both sides."

"What Mexico just did might be a minor tussle, part of a negotiation that results in a smoother new arrangement," Astor tweeted. "But we should keep an eye on how this unfolds."

Trump's first deportation flight to Belo Horizonte in Brazil landed earlier this week, according to a local Brazilian news source. That flight carried 88 Brazilian migrants and an untold number of migrants from other countries. Both Bazil and the United States have had an agreement in place on deportations since 2017.

Click here to read NBC News' report in full.

READ MORE: 'Going to pay a lot more': Here's how Trump's deportations will lead to huge tax increases

'Mexican America': President of Mexico trolls Trump with vintage map

The President of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum, wasted no time trolling President-elect Donald Trump, posting a vintage map showing that a large portion of what is now the United States of America used to be called “Mexican America.” President Sheinbaum delivered her remarks in response to Trump’s claim that he will rename the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America.”

President Sheinbaum “used her Wednesday morning news conference to show a world map dating from 1607. The map labeled North America as Mexican America and already identified the Gulf of Mexico as such, 169 years before the United States was founded,” The New York Times reports.

“Why don’t we call it Mexican America? It sounds pretty, no?” Dr. Sheinbaum said in Spanish (video below).

READ MORE: DOJ to Release Special Counsel’s J6 Report on Trump, His Lawyers Expected to Object: Report

“In response to Mr. Trump’s comment that Mexico was ‘essentially run by the cartels,’ Ms. Sheinbaum told reporters on Wednesday that, ‘with all due respect,’ the president-elect was ill-informed,” The Times also noted.

Dr. Sheinbaum, a former Mayor of Mexico City, has a PhD in energy engineering. She is a Nobel Peace Prize-winning physicist who appeared on the BBC‘s “list of 100 inspiring and influential women from around the world for 2018.”

During her Wednesday press conference, President Sheinbaum also told reporters, “In Mexico, the people rule.”

“And we are going to collaborate and understand each other with the government of President Trump, I am sure of it, defending our sovereignty as a free, independent and sovereign country.”

READ MORE: ‘Unprecedented Intervention’: SCOTUS Responds to Trump ‘Hush Money’ Sentencing Delay Bid

According to The Times, she stated that her country is “very interested in stopping the entry of U.S. firearms into Mexico,” and complained about the large number of guns illegally smuggled from the U.S.

The Washington Post’s global affairs columnist Ishaan Tharoor, pointing to the Mexican President’s comments, noted, “We’re seeing some responses to Trump’s absurdity.”

Watch the video below or at this link.

RELATED: ‘Bananas’: Congressman Asks How Trump’s ‘Insane’ Threats Benefit Americans Economically

'Act quickly': Expert says there’s still time for Congress to curb Trump’s tariff powers

President-elect Donald Trump has made it clear that he plans to impose broad tariffs on imports from some of the United States' largest trade partners. But one expert says Congress has the ability to limit his ability to raise import duties before the new Congress is sworn in on January 3.

In a recent op-ed for the Hill, Inu Manak — a fellow for trade policy at the Council on Foreign Relations — argued that Trump's proposed 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico and 10% on China would be harmful for both American consumers and businesses. She pointed out that the American car manufacturing industry in particular would be one of the hardest hit sectors of the economy given how automakers depend on parts imported from Canada and Mexico that can cross international boundaries multiple times before a vehicle hits the showroom.

"Imposing a tariff on these products means charging a tax every single time a part crosses the border," Manak wrote. "That would quickly add up."

READ MORE: 'Chaos': Small biz owner hit by Trump's last tariff reveals key flaw that hurts US companies

Manak also observed that the new tariff proposals fly in the face of the U.S., Mexico and Canada (USMCA) agreement that Trump brokered during his first term in office, which he called "the largest, most significant, modern, and balanced trade agreement in history." She opined that Trump going back on the USMCA's provisions can make the U.S. seem like an unreliable trade partner, discouraging other countries from doing business with the United States.

"[Trump] is either now claiming that he negotiated a bad deal, or that our trading partners cannot be assured of the commitments the U.S. makes in international agreements," she wrote. "All this raises the question of why any trading partner would ever bother to negotiate a trade accord with the U.S. ever again."

Democrats still hold a Senate majority during Congress' lame duck session, which ends in early January. Manak called for lawmakers to pass the Prevent Tariff Abuse Act, authored by Reps. Susan DelBene (D-Wash.) and Don Beyer (D-Va.), which curtails the president's ability to use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose tariffs. But she added that Congress could pass even bolder action if they wish.

"That is a good start, but there’s still more that Congress can do," Manak wrote. "Trade analysts have laid out a much broader list of tariff authorities that could be abused by Trump and Congress should act quickly to repeal or reform them."

READ MORE: '$213 per device': Prices for these products are expected to soar under Trump tariffs

Click here to read Manak's op-ed in the Hill.

On the island, Cubans are watching the US election as if it were their own

MIAMI — Even with a potential hurricane on Cuba’s doorstep, the dominant issue on the island is the U.S. presidential election. With increasingly broader access to the internet, Cubans are staying informed on what’s happening in their neighboring country, which they say may largely determine their own future.Cuban economists and others have followed the election almost minute by minute, reflecting the importance of relations with the United States, which have suffered since the election of Donald Trump.Pedro Monreal, an economist who favors changes in the island’s Soviet-styled economic model,...

By banishing cartoons and adding warnings, Mexico takes on obesity

Their days are numbered: the beaming parrot on infant cereal, the pastry chef bear, the cartoon chocolate drops.These cartoons, which have accompanied generations of Mexican consumers and promoted sales, will have to disappear from packaging, accused of being accomplices in the country's obesity epidemic.New regulations oblige the Mexican food industry, including the big international brands, to put warning labels on packaged food and sugary drinks, and to change the presentation of unhealthy products.Mexico, the world's largest consumer of soft drinks, is the country with the largest share of...

Photographer reveals part of Trump's 'secret' agreement with Mexico with a close-up shot

Since calling off his threat of tariffs against Mexico on Friday, President Donald Trump has claimed that he won massive concessions from the country in line with its demands that it reduce the Central American immigration. While the agreement he has announced has been widely panned as old news — an apparent attempt by Trump to save face after backing down from a reckless threat — the president has insisted that there is another, secret deal that's even more significant.

Keep reading...Show less

Here are the 10 most seductive drugs — and their fascinating histories

Want to get the latest on America's drug & rehab culture? Sign up for The Fix's newsletter here.     

Keep reading...Show less

Pundits argue: Mexico's Democratic López Obrador is a bigger threat than Brazil's Dictator Bolsonaro

One would be hard-pressed to find two newly elected world leaders more different than Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) and Brazilian President-elect Jair Bolsonaro. The former is a moderate social democrat who promises to crack down on corruption and serve as an advocate for his nation’s poor and working people; the latter is a disciple of the military junta that ruled his country from 1964 to 1985, infamous for his racistmisogynist and anti-democracy comments on national television, who promised on the campaign trail, “I will give the police carte blanche to kill.”

Keep reading...Show less
@2026 - AlterNet Media Inc. All Rights Reserved. - "Poynter" fonts provided by fontsempire.com.