A landslide election win will embolden Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexico's first woman president, to defend her country's interests in sometimes-tense relations with the United States dominated by trade, migration and drugs, experts say. While the president-elect is expected to be more diplomatic in public than her sharp-tongued predecessor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, known by his initials AMLO, in private it could be a different story. The left-wing former Mexico City mayor apparently plans to be "a tough opponent" for Washington, said Duncan Wood, an expert at the Mexico Institute think tank in the United States.
Sheinbaum, a former student activist who won nearly 60 percent of votes in Sunday's election, pledged in her victory speech to maintain "a relationship of friendship, mutual respect and equality" with the United States. "And we will always defend the Mexicans who are on the other side of the border," she added. Migration across the US southern border remains a key flashpoint issue in the United States, making control over the flow "one of the most important levers" Mexico City has in its ties with Washington, Wood told AFP.
He predicts Sheinbaum "will definitely continue to use migration as a bargaining chip." - Strong mandate - Sheinbaum's comments "suggest she might advocate for more humane migration policies," said Maria Fernanda Bozmoski, deputy director of the Atlantic Council's Adrienne Arsht Latin America Center, a US-based think tank. With a sizable majority in Me.
