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FinanceMexico

Mexico’s president taunts Biden over energy policy trade fight: ‘Ooooh, I’m so scared’

Will Daniel
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Will Daniel
Will Daniel
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Will Daniel
By
Will Daniel
Will Daniel
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July 21, 2022, 12:17 PM ET
Mexico's president taunts Biden over energy policy trade fight: 'Ooooh, I'm so scared.'
Mexico's president taunts Biden over energy policy trade fight: 'Ooooh, I'm so scared.'Getty Images

There’s a brewing trade dispute between the U.S. And Mexico on energy policy, and it’s getting ugly fast.

“Ooooh, I’m so scared,” Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) said at a Wednesday press conference, referencing a popular Mexican song and taunting the Biden administration by ordering his staff to play it.

When reporters asked him how he proposes to solve the policy spat, AMLO was defiant: “Nothing will happen.”

What is going on here?

It started early on Wednesday, when U.S. Officials argued that AMLO’s energy policies favor Mexico’s state-run electrical utility and oil companies and undermine American business.

The U.S. Said it was seeking “dispute settlement consultations” under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USCMA), a trade agreement meant to ensure balanced, reciprocal trading between North American nations. It was a first step in a process that could lead to tariffs on some Mexican products.

The news comes just over a week after Biden and AMLO put out a joint statement reaffirming their commitment to the USMCA. 

Mexico’s president laughed off the White House’s rhetoric, saying that Biden has always respected Mexican sovereignty and the trade fight was merely a result of corrupt right-wing lobbying, the Wall Street Journal first reported.

Mexico has been attempting to prop up its state-run electrical utility, the Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE), and its national oil and gas company, Petróleos Mexicanos (PEMEX), with policies that U.S. Trade ambassador Katerine Tai argues “prioritize the distribution” of energy from these firms, disincentivizing market competition and clean-energy production in the country.

“We have tried to work constructively with the Mexican government to address these concerns, but, unfortunately, U.S. Companies continue to face unfair treatment in Mexico,” Tai said in a statement on Wednesday.

Canada’s trade ministry is also launching energy consultations with Mexico, with officials telling Reuters they are “supporting the U.S. In their challenge.”

The Alliance for Trade Enforcement, a trade group made up of various U.S. Industry associations, also stood by the Biden administration’s trade fight.

“The Alliance for Trade Enforcement applauds USTR’s request for consultations with Mexico. President López Obrador’s efforts to nationalize the country’s energy sector directly violate the USMCA, obstruct clean energy initiatives in the region, and threaten America’s economic prosperity,” they wrote in a Wednesday statement.

Republican senators applauded the move by the Biden administration as well, but argued it should have been done sooner.

“Under the USMCA, Mexico agreed to level the playing field and [to] allow American companies to compete with Mexican companies to meet Mexico’s energy needs. But the government of Mexico has been violating this agreement. It was well past time for the United States to respond, and it was right for the U.S. Trade Representative to finally act,” U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R.-Texas) said in a Wednesday statement.

Mexico’s economy ministry responded to U.S. And Canadian requests for consultation late on Wednesday night, with officials saying that they are hoping to reach a “mutually satisfactory solution” to the energy dispute. President López Obrador remained defiant on Thursday, however, arguing that Mexico has not violated the USMCA trade agreement.

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Will Daniel
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