Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel López Obrador presented one of his government’s flagship policy proposals at the weekend: a five-year national development plan designed not just to drive economic growth and attract foreign direct investment (FDI) but also to improve justice and the rule of law, and social welfare, “ending the nightmare that was neoliberal politics”. The main ‘development’ concerning the political opposition, however, is that López Obrador will seek to stay in power beyond the timeframe of the plan. This after the federal lower chamber of congress approved a constitutional reform establishing a presidential recall referendum, which the opposition fears could pave the way for re-election. López Obrador sought to defuse political tensions, to enable the reform to pass through the senate, by signing a document expressly ruling out a re-election bid in 2024.

More recent briefings & intelligence

Becoming a member at Canning House

By joining as an individual member you’ll have the opportunity to access our wide range of public events at a discounted rate, as well as additional benefits such as online access to in-depth reports, webinar recordings and This Week in Latin America news articles.

Join now

Find out more about our membership plans

Sign up to our newsletter

Get the latest information on upcoming Canning House events and other events related to Latin America and Iberia across the UK and beyond.

Required
Required
Required