Washington Post
By Kevin Sullivan and Mary Jordan
February 25, 2016
Two
former Mexican presidents said in separate interviews with The
Washington Post that the xenophobic rhetoric of Donald Trump and the
other Republicans running for president
has damaged U.S.-Mexico relations and changed the way many Mexicans
view Americans.
Vicente
Fox and Felipe Calderón, who led Mexico from 2000 to 2012, said that
insults from the Republicans — along with the rapturous reception such
comments receive at
huge rallies — show a new, alarming strain of anti-Mexican racism.
“Trump
is saying stupid things, but the problem is that 40 percent of
Republicans say, ‘Yes, you’re right,’ ” said Fox, 73, a former Coca-Cola
executive who has long identified
with the Republican Party. “They are hearing the prophet telling them
that he is going to take them to the promised land. But he is going to
lead everybody into the desert to die of hunger and thirst. He is a
false prophet.”
In
a recent interview on his ranch in central Mexico, Fox said he can
scarcely believe what he’s hearing from his northern neighbor: threats
of mass deportations of Mexicans
and other undocumented workers, revoking birthright citizenship,
building a multibillion-dollar wall to keep Mexicans out — and sticking
Mexico with the bill.
Asked about Trump’s assertion that he was going to get Mexico to pay for his proposed border wall, Fox said bluntly: “Fuck it.”
Trump’s
troubles with Mexico boiled over Thursday when Fox was quoted on Fusion
TV telling interviewer Jorge Ramos, “I’m not going to pay for that
f---ing wall!”
Trump
quickly tweeted that Fox “horribly used the F word when discussing the
wall. He must apologize! If I did that there would be an uproar!”
Reached
by telephone Thursday evening, Fox said: “No way. No way. I will never
apologize. He has offended Mexicans, and he’s the one who should
apologize.”
Noting
Trump’s recent disagreement with Pope Francis over the proposed border
wall, Fox said, “I think the Republican Party should demand from him
respect, not only for
the Mexicans but for the pope and for Muslims. The Republican Party has
let this go too far. It’s ridiculous.”
Fox said he had been speaking with Republicans in the United States.
“They
are telling me, ‘That is not us, it is him. We are ashamed,’ ” he said.
“I tell them, ‘Open your eyes, please. Listen to what he is saying.’
This is a very shameful
situation for the United States as a nation and for the Republican
Party.”
Fox also mentioned Trump’s wife, Melania Trump, who immigrated to the United States from her native Slovenia.
“He has a wife that is imported,” Fox said. “How can he offend every immigrant? How can he offend every Mexican?”
Trump
has made a wall along the entire U.S.-Mexico border a central promise
of his campaign. At rallies, Trump’s mentions of it draw enormous
applause, especially the
billionaire’s pledge that he will make Mexico pay for it. It has become
such a familiar routine that Trump now often asks the crowd, “Who’s
gonna pay for the wall?” And the crowd shouts, “Mexico!”
Fox’s
comments are particularly noteworthy because he hosted President George
W. Bush on his ranch at a high point in U.S.-Mexico relations. In
February 2001, Bush went
to Mexico on his first foreign trip as president and stood shoulder to
shoulder with Fox, promising closer ties and friendlier immigration
policies.
The “Cowboy Summit” brought together two new presidents who called themselves “amigos” and said they felt “like family.”
Calderón,
whose administration worked closely with Washington, called Trump’s
proposed wall “useless” because it would not stop illegal immigration,
U.S. taxpayers would
foot the bill, and it would fuel anti-American feelings and undermine
relations with Mexico.
“Good
collaboration between governments is a safer way to protect the United
States than any stupid wall,” he said Thursday in an interview in his
office in Mexico City.
“We won’t pay a single cent for that stupid wall. It’s pathetic. . . .
Trump is completely demagogical.”
Calderón
also pointed out that in recent years more Mexicans are returning home
than are entering the United States. According to a recent Pew Research
Center study, between
2009 and 2014 about 870,000 Mexicans tried to enter the United States,
while about 1 million Mexicans living in the United States returned to
Mexico.
“Trump ignores that,” Calderón said. “Anyone who ignores such an important thing is, of course, an ignorant man.”
No
country has felt more offended and attacked by the harsh campaign
rhetoric than Mexico, which does more than $500 billion a year in trade
with the United States, buying
more U.S. goods than China and Japan combined.
While
Mexicans are used to anti-immigration sentiment in the United States on
economic grounds — immigrants blamed for taking jobs and driving down
wages — many here now
hear from the United States what they consider overt racism.
“Donald
Trump, if I understand correctly, himself descends from immigrants,”
Calderón said. “So the question is not immigrants or not, the question
is white or nonwhite
immigrants. He has tried to play hardball with Mexican people in a very
ignorant way.”
Mexicans
were startled last summer when Trump called Mexican immigrants
“rapists” and “criminals.” Almost immediately, pink-faced, blond Trump
pinatas started showing
up in stores in this country of 122 million people.
Street-level disgust with Trump has been grown since.
A Mexican band posted a “corrido,” or traditional folk song, on YouTube saying, “Nobody wants [expletive] Donald Trump.”
Mexican
developers created a video game in which players can use a cannon,
mounted outside the White House, to shoot tomatoes, cakes or shoes at a
scowling image of Trump.
Winning players keep Trump out of the White House.
But Fox, Calderón and other Mexican officials said the Mexican response to Trump could be far more serious than popular anger.
Arturo
Sarukhan, Mexico’s ambassador to the United States from 2007 to 2013,
said Mexico would likely retaliate against Trump’s “openly racist”
positions if he were elected
president.
“On
the economic front, if you want to build walls and slap tariffs, you’re
going to trigger a trade war with your second-largest buyer of goods,”
Sarukhan said, noting
that Trump has suggested import tariffs on Mexican-manufactured goods,
including cars.
“If you slap tariffs on Mexico, Mexico will slap reprisal tariffs on U.S. products,” he said.
He
said that the two nations do $1.4 billion a day in bilateral trade and
that 26 U.S. states have Mexico as their No. 1 trading partner. He said 8
million jobs in the
United States depend directly on trade with Mexico.
Calderón
said Trump’s anti-Mexican trade proposals could result in job losses in
the United States, so he is “more dangerous for American workers than
for Mexicans.”
Calderón
added that Trump would also undermine close collaboration between the
two nations on protecting the southern U.S. border from potential
terrorist infiltrations.
He cited the 2011 case of a man arrested by Mexican authorities,
working on information gathered by both governments, and accused of
plotting to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s ambassador in Washington.
A
million Mexicans and Americans cross the border legally each day, in
both directions. Calderón said border security is a product of close
cooperation between authorities
in both countries.
“We
have been collaborating a lot,” he said. “If Donald Trump intends to
have a neighbor who is insulted on a daily basis, it would be naive to
think that such collaboration
would prevail. Actually, there would be no collaboration at all.”
Mexican
officials also noted that about 35 million people of Mexican heritage
live in the United States. More than 1 million U.S. citizens live in
Mexico, the largest
U.S. expatriate community in the world.
Fox and Calderón said the 2016 campaign has undone years of goodwill.
Vice
President Biden, in Mexico on Thursday, told President Enrique Peña
Nieto that there has been “a lot of damaging and incredibly inaccurate
rhetoric” in the U.S. election,
adding, “I feel almost obliged to apologize for some of what my
political colleagues have said about Mexico, about the Mexican people.”
“It’s
a heated campaign season, and I just want you to know, Mr. President,
that the most heated of the rhetoric you’ve heard from some of the
competitors for the nomination
for president is not who we are as the American people.
“This,
too, shall pass. . . . We have gone through these episodes of
xenophobia, but they have always been overcome,” Biden said.
Without
naming Trump, Peña Nieto said, “There are those who have the vision to
close themselves off . . . build walls, but this only means isolating
oneself and ending
up alone.”
Fox
said much of the appeal of the Mexico-bashing seems to be based on
fears about security, which he traces to the 9/11 attacks — which also
diverted Bush’s attention
from Mexico to the rising war on terror.
Fox
has always been an eager promoter of the United States. As a teenager,
he drove truckloads of broccoli and other produce from his family’s
ranch to sell along the
U.S. border, 500 miles to the north. During his presidency, he called
for the existing border walls to be demolished, saying, “No country that
is proud of itself should build walls.”
“Fear
makes you build walls, which is stupid,” Fox said. “Fear made the
Chinese build a wall. Fear made Communist Russia build a wall in Berlin.
. . . Trump is very wise
in understanding the people standing in front of him. He has the
ability to tell that crowd what they want to hear. So when you tell
them: ‘Mexicans, we have to stop them, they are invading the United
States, we must keep them out of this nation,’ those people
are willing to listen to that. The reason is fear.”
Fox
said he sees the rise of Trump — and, on the Democratic side, Sen.
Bernie Sanders of Vermont — as part of a global trend toward dwindling
confidence in government
and angry outsiders upending politics, from Britain to Spain to Brazil.
“This
is what explains to me a guy like Trump and a guy like Bernie,” Fox
said. “They come in and break the system and provoke a revolution. We’re
going to see more surprises,
because democracy is not delivering what people expect.”
Calderón said the problem is not that “one crazy guy with a lot of money” is making anti-Mexican
comments but that he has such a huge following. “He is awakening a lot
of bad feelings and bad values which are completely contrary to the
values I admire among
the American society,” Calderón said.
He
said Trump has undermined efforts by successive U.S. governments to
build allies and bolster the image of the United States abroad.
“All
the hate that he is seeding everywhere right now among the Muslims or
Mexicans or Latin Americans or Asians could provoke an incredible
reaction against the United
States,” he said.
Fox also said he thought Trump had damaged the U.S. image around the world.
“What
is happening will not affect military power of the United States,” Fox
said. “What is being affected severely is soft power, image,
credibility, having friends around
the world. Crazy guys like this could even end those friendships.”
Fox said he thought Trump’s political campaign was motivated, at least in part, by increasing his company’s profits.
“I
cannot understand why the Republican Party lets somebody come in and
use it to make the Trump brand more successful in the business world,”
Fox said. “And the Republicans
are quiet? He is laughing at everybody. He is amassing a fortune. Today
the Trump brand is worth a hundred times more than it was before. So
for him, he already won.”
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