Tuesday, December 16, 2025

López Obrador says stricter gun control ‘urgently needed’ in US

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said Tuesday that gun control is urgently needed in the United States, and suggested that U.S. President Joe Biden and former president Donald Trump should both pledge to impose greater regulations on the sale of firearms.

His remarks on U.S. gun control policies at his morning press conference came in response to a question about the assassination attempt on Trump in Pennsylvania on Saturday and the 20-year-old shooter’s ease of access to guns.

Donald Trump at the Republican National Convention clapping on Monday July 15, 2024.
A gunman tried to assassinate Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump — seen here on Monday at the Republican National Convention with a bandage on his ear covering his bullet injury — on July 13.

“I believe that controlling the sale of guns in the United States would help a lot,” López Obrador said. “It’s something that needs to be done urgently.”

López Obrador also said that if “the two candidates” for the United States presidency were to sign “a commitment to regulate the sale of guns” should they win a second term, it “would be a well-regarded act by Americans.”

“It would be an act of good faith in the quest for unity and peace, a first step,” he said.

AMLO added that “other causes” of gun violence in the U.S. have to be addressed as well “because this is a social crisis.”

“It has to be combatted, they have to get to the bottom of it, they have to return to the morals of the founders of that great nation. I believe that … [those morals] have been lost, and there is social decay,” he said.

López Obrador said that about 50,000 guns have been seized by authorities in Mexico since he took office in late 2018, and highlighted that “approximately 75%” of them were smuggled into the country from the United States.

Mexico's president Lopez Obrador exiting a limo and stepping on a red carpet at the White House, heading toward then U.S. President Donald Trump in 2020.
President López Obrador also revealed in his remarks Tuesday a lesser-known detail of his longstanding warm relationship with Trump: when AMLO contracted COVID, he says Trump called him and sent him a packet of medicine, which AMLO said was a kindness he appreciated. (Cuartoscuro)

“There is no control of guns [in the U.S.]. If we confiscated 50,000, imagine how many are coming in because we can’t seize them all. … And in the United States you can buy them in a supermarket; that can’t go on,” he said.

In Mexico, guns can only be purchased legally at one store operated by the army in the metropolitan area of Mexico City.

While random mass shootings in places such as schools and shopping centers are extremely rare in Mexico, targeted killings occur regularly, including in bars, and overall homicide numbers are significantly higher than in the U.S.

Political violence is also a major problem in Mexico.

The majority of homicides in Mexico are committed with firearms illegally brought into Mexico from the United States, a crime the Mexican government wants its U.S. counterpart to do more to combat.

In addition to advocating stricter gun control in the United States, López Obrador on Tuesday once again expressed relief that Trump wasn’t killed when a gunman shot at him as he spoke at a rally on Saturday evening.

“We feel good that nothing happened to former president Trump,” he said before acknowledging the “friendship” he and his government have with the 78-year-old Republican currently vying to return to the White House for a second term.

“I won’t forget that when I got COVID on one occasion he called me and sent me a packet of medicine. … I was already being treated, so I turned it over to the nutrition institute,” he said, referring to the National Institute of Medical Sciences and Nutrition.

“He was no longer president, but he demonstrated that kindness,” López Obrador said.

Mexico News Daily 

11 COMMENTS

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Sheinbaum mañanera Dec. 16, 2025

Sheinbaum weighs in on Trump’s designation of fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction: Tuesday’s mañanera recapped

0
Sheinbaum told reporters that her government's "vision about how to address drug use is different" from that of the Trump administration, which on Monday declared the drug fentanyl a weapon of mass destruction (WMD).
cubrebocas

Health officials report the first case of ‘superflu’ in Mexico

0
The variant is highly contagious but Mexican health officials say they have the resources to keep it under control and that patients respond well to the usual flu treatments.
tijuana river

Mexico, US sign accord to solve toxic sewage crisis in Tijuana and San Diego

0
The agreement marks the second recent positive development toward resolving the long-simmering sewage and water disputes between the neighboring countries.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity