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Sheinbaum endorses Carney’s WEF speech lamenting ‘rupture’ of world order: Wednesday’s mañanera recapped

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Sheinbaum looking out at her mañanera on Jan. 21, 2026
Also on Wednesday, the president offered some advice to cell phone users to help them avoid becoming victims of crime, and pitched Mexico's advantages for investors. (Saúl López/Cuartoscuro)

At her Wednesday morning press conference, President Claudia Sheinbaum spoke about her government’s transfer to the United States on Tuesday of 37 cartel figures. (Read Mexico News Daily’s report here.)

She also offered some advice to cell phone users to help them avoid becoming victims of crime, and took a moment to endorse the speech Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney made on Tuesday at the World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in Davos, Switzerland.

Here is a recap of the president’s Jan. 21 mañanera.

Sheinbaum: Don’t answer telephone calls from unknown numbers 

Late in her press conference, Sheinbaum told reporters that Mexico was one of a small number of countries where mobile telephone SIM cards could be purchased without the need to show identification.

However, as of Jan. 9, that is no longer the case.

Sheinbaum said that the previous situation made it easy for people to commit crimes over the telephone, including extortion and fraud.

The government’s objective now, she said, is for every SIM card — or chip as a SIM is commonly known in Mexico — to be “linked to a person.”

“As that happens, it will be much more difficult to use a phone … [to commit a crime], Sheinbaum said.

That said, the president acknowledged that many calls with a criminal intent are now being made with “numbers that come from outside Mexico.”

Sheinbaum subsequently advised Mexicans not to answer calls from numbers they don’t recognize.

Owners of mobile phones in Mexico are required to register and link each number with their personal identity by June 30 or face service cuts. (Camila Ayaya Benabib/Cuartoscuro)

“It is important that we do not answer calls from numbers that are not identified in our contacts,” she said.

Responding to privacy concerns related to the need to register and link a cell phone number to one’s personal identity, Sheinbaum stressed that telephone companies rather than the government stores people’s personal information.

She indicated that authorities, when investigating a crime facilitated by the use of a telephone, can ask for information from telecommunications companies as they seek to establish the identity of the perpetrator.

Sheinbaum praises Carney’s WEF address

Early in her Q&A session with reporters, Sheinbaum praised Prime Minister Carney for his speech in Davos.

“[It was a] very good speech by Carney, by Prime Minister Carney, I don’t know if you heard it,” she said.

“[It was] very much in tune with the current times,” Sheinbaum said.

During his address, Carney asserted that the rules-based international order is undergoing a “rupture, not a transition.”

The Canadian prime minister “never mentioned President Trump by name, but his reference was clear,” wrote The New York Times, noting that “the speech came as President Trump doubled down on his threats to take Greenland away from Denmark.”

Mexico’s ‘advantages’ as an investment destination, according to Sheinbaum

A reporter asked the president what message her government was seeking to send to international investors at the WEF meeting in Davos, where Environment Minister Alicia Bárcena and Altagracia Gómez, head of the government’s Advisory Council for Regional Development and Relocation, are representing Mexico.

“That Mexico is open to private investment from different countries, to foreign direct investment,” Sheinbaum responded.

She also said that Mexico’s representatives would promote the Economic Development Hubs for Well-being, new industrial corridors that will be located in various states across the country.

Asked what “advantages” Mexico offers to investors, Sheinbaum first cited the “hardworking” and “responsible” people of Mexico and the presence of “a government recognized by its people.”

Mexico falls from PwC’s list of top 10 countries to invest in

She also mentioned “certainty” and her government’s vision of investment “not just as a means of growth” but also as “a means of creating employment with wellbeing.”

Citing additional advantages, Sheinbaum spoke about Mexico’s “proximity to the United States,” the “trade openness” it has “with various countries around the world” and “the scheme we are implementing to integrate production chains” in North America.

Although she mentioned certainty as an “advantage” offered by Mexico, the Trump administration’s undermining of the USMCA free trade pact via the implementation of various tariffs on Mexican goods has decreased certainty for investors in Mexico. Some Mexican government initiatives, such as the controversial judicial reform and the disbandment of various autonomous agencies, have had the same effect, according to critics of Sheinbaum and her predecessor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

Foreign investment in Mexico increased last year, but the government is eager to attract even more international capital as it seeks to make its Plan México economic initiative a success.

By Mexico News Daily chief staff writer Peter Davies (peter.davies@mexiconewsdaily.com)

2 US players switch to Team Mexico ahead of the 2026 World Cup

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2 soccer players who switched to Mexican team
Brian Gutiérrez (R) and Richard Ledezma (L), dual citizens, have switched allegiances in order to play for Mexico in the upcoming FIFA 2026 World Cup. (X)

Less than five months before the FIFA men’s World Cup soccer tournament kicks off in Mexico City, two American-born players have completed one-time national team switches from the United States to Mexico.

The Mexican Football Federation (FMF) announced Tuesday that FIFA — the world governing body for soccer — has cleared Brian Gutiérrez and Richard Ledezma to represent Mexico in the 48-nation tournament, set for June 11–July 19 in Mexico, Canada and the U.S.

They are also eligible for friendlies this week against Panama (Thursday in Panama City) and Bolivia (Sunday in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia).​

Though Gutiérrez and Ledezma are viewed as promising contributors rather than established stars or automatic starters, they should bolster the talent level on coach Javier Aguirre’s 26-man World Cup roster.

The squad has fallen one spot to No. 16 in the newest FIFA world rankings, one place behind the United States and one ahead of Uruguay — a far cry from when Mexico was No. 4 in the world just before the 2006 World Cup in Germany.

Gutiérrez, 22, and Ledezma, 25, both were born in the United States and hold dual citizenship, having previously appeared for U.S. teams at the youth or senior level.

FIFA regulations allow a player with fewer than three senior caps before age 21 to change associations after completing the paperwork, which Mexico and FIFA have now finalized for both.

The FMF said the pair had informed officials they wanted to represent Mexico permanently.

Gutiérrez (born in Berwyn, Illinois) played in two friendlies for the U.S. men’s national team in January 2025 that did not lock in his allegiance.

Ledezma (born in Phoenix, Arizona) owns a single USMNT senior cap from 2020 and played at the 2019 Under-20 World Cup, requiring a one-time switch under FIFA rules because those games are official youth competition.

Both players recently joined the Liga MX squad Chivas of Guadalajara — Gutiérrez from the Chicago Fire of Major League Soccer and Ledezma from PSV Eindhoven in the Netherlands’ top pro league. Neither had played in Liga MX previously.

Gutiérrez is an attacking midfielder coming off a nine-goal, three-assist MLS season for the Fire. His 19 goals and 17 assists over the past four seasons for Chicago suggest he’ll add more scoring punch and ball-carrying ability to Mexico’s roster.

Ledezma, meanwhile, has been highlighted for his “European vision” and his ability to create high-level scoring chances since joining Chivas six months ago.

After the games this week, Mexico is scheduled for more World Cup preparation with friendlies Feb. 7 against Iceland (in Querétaro), March 21 against Portugal (in Mexico City) and March 25 against Belgium (in Chicago).

Mexico will open the 2026 World Cup in Group A against South Africa on June 11 at Estadio Azteca, renamed Estadio Banorte for marketing purposes.

The last men’s World Cup was Qatar 2022, where Mexico failed to advance to the knockout round for the first time since 1978.

With reports from Milenio, Reuters and ESPN.com

The economy expanded 2.3% in December, indicating annual growth below 1%

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mercado
INEGI's latest figures show December ending with a 3.69% inflation rate, the lowest end-of-year level in five years. (Camila Ayala Benabib/Cuartoscuro)

The Mexican economy grew 2.3% in annual seasonally adjusted terms in December and 0.2% compared to November, according to preliminary data published by the national statistics agency INEGI on Wednesday.

INEGI also published updated data for November showing 1.2% annual growth and 0.1% month-over-month growth.

shoe factory
Mexico’s secondary sector (which includes manufacturing) grew 1.2% annually in December. (Mario Jasso/Cuartoscuro)

According to Gabriela Siller, director of economic analysis at Banco Base, the data indicates that the Mexican economy recorded annual growth of 0.65% in 2025, a marked slowdown compared to the 1.5% expansion in 2024. Siller also said that the data — which is subject to revision — indicates the economy grew 1.36% in annual terms in the fourth quarter of last year and 0.97% compared to the previous three-month period.

INEGI’s preliminary data shows that Mexico’s secondary sector (manufacturing and construction) grew 1.2% annually in December, while the tertiary sector (services) expanded 2.9%. INEGI didn’t provide data for the primary sector (agriculture and mining).

On a month-over-month basis, the secondary sector grew 0.1% in December while the tertiary sector expanded 0.2%.

The overall month-over-month growth rate of 0.2% in December was the best result for the Mexican economy in the final month of the year since 2023. In December last year, the economy contracted 1% compared to the previous month, according to final data.

Other need-to-know economic data 

  • The Mexican peso was trading at 17.49 to the US dollar at 1:20 p.m. Mexico City time, according to Bloomberg. The peso is stronger now than at any point in 2025.
  • Mexico’s headline inflation rate was 3.69% in December, the lowest end-of-year level in five years.
  • The Bank of Mexico’s benchmark interest rate is currently set at 7%. The bank’s board will hold its next monetary policy meeting on Feb. 5.

With reports from Expansión and El Economista 

Sheinbaum launches 50-billion-peso ‘Mega Bachetón’ to fix Mexico’s pothole-plagued highways

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a car avoiding a pothole on a street in Mexico
The initiative includes both routine maintenance — filling potholes, leveling surfaces, clearing vegetation and cleaning drainage systems — and more extensive periodic conservation involving milling and applying five-centimeter asphalt layers. (Rogelio Morales/Cuartoscuro)

President Sheinbaum announced a major national road repair program on Wednesday, pledging 50 billion pesos (US $2.86B) to tackle Mexico’s crumbling federal highways through an intensive resurfacing campaign dubbed the “Mega Bachetón” (Mega Pothole-thon).

The announcement, made during the president’s morning news conference at the National Palace, represents one of the most significant infrastructure investments of her administration and directly responds to widespread complaints about road conditions across the country.

 

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“We conducted a thorough review of the highways and gathered requests from citizens during our travels throughout the country,” Sheinbaum said.

The National Highway Conservation and Mega Bachetón Program 2026 will cover 18,000 kilometers of toll-free federal highways, or just under half (42%) of the country’s toll-free roadways. The initiative expects to create approximately 100,000 jobs throughout 2026.

Regional breakdown

The program divides the country into five operational regions, each targeting key transportation corridors:

Northwest (Baja California, Baja California Sur, Chihuahua, Durango, Sonora and Sinaloa): 8.659 billion pesos to repair 3,170 kilometers covering the Pacific Corridor, Mexico-Nogales and Mazatlán-Matamoros and Gulf-North routes.

Northeast (Coahuila, Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí and Zacatecas): Covering the Mexico-Nuevo Laredo, Querétaro-Ciudad Juárez, Veracruz-Monterrey and Gulf-Huasteca routes.

Central-West (Aguascalientes, Colima, Guanajuato, Jalisco, Michoacán, Nayarit and Querétaro): Including the Manzanillo-Tampico and Guadalajara-Zacatecas routes.

Central Region (México state, Guerrero, Hidalgo, Morelos, Puebla and Tlaxcala): Targeting the Acapulco-Tuxpan, Center-Gulf, Acapulco-Veracruz, Mexico-Veracruz and High Plateau Corridor highways.

South-Southeast (Campeche, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Quintana Roo, Tabasco, Veracruz and Yucatán): Addressing the Puebla-Progreso, Puebla-Tapachula, Trans-Isthmus Circuit and Yucatán Peninsula routes.

A map of Mexico's 15 priority highways for the Mega Bachetón project.
The 15 priority highways for the Mega Bachetón project. (proyectosmexico.gob.mx)

Technology and efficiency

To optimize resources and reduce costs, the government has invested in state-of-the-art repaving equipment. The program will deploy 31 paving trains and 62 specialized pothole repair units.

Ten paving trains began operations in 2025, with another 10 set to start work between January and February 2026. An additional 11 machines will be purchased to ensure each region has dedicated equipment.

The modern machinery can advance up to one kilometer per day, significantly improving efficiency. The government is purchasing materials directly and using its own equipment to strengthen the program’s technical capacity and control costs.

A key innovation is a digital monitoring system designed to detect and repair potholes within 72 hours across the 43,000-kilometer toll-free network.

Timeline

The program officially runs from January through December 2026, with work already underway in some regions. The initiative includes both routine maintenance — filling potholes, leveling surfaces, clearing vegetation and cleaning drainage systems — and more extensive periodic conservation involving milling and applying five-centimeter asphalt layers.

The massive undertaking represents a significant test for the Sheinbaum administration’s ability to deliver on infrastructure promises. With Mexico preparing to co-host the 2026 FIFA World Cup alongside the United States and Canada, improved highway conditions will be critical for both domestic travel and international visitors navigating between host cities.

Mexico News Daily

At Davos, Mexico’s environment minister stresses urgent climate action

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Alicia Bárcena at Davos 2026
Environment Minister Alicia Bárcena is urging Davos attendees to do more and move faster in responding to climate change: "The scale at which we are currently working is insufficient." (Semarnat/X)

Environment Minister Alicia Bárcena, leading Mexico’s delegation at this year’s Davos Forum, is using her platform to emphasize the importance of accelerating the fight against climate change.

The annual World Economic Forum, held in Davos, Switzerland, from Jan. 19 to 23, provides world leaders, business executives and academics the opportunity to discuss critical global economic and political issues.

Alongside Bárcena, the coordinator of the Advisory Council for Economic and Regional Development and Relocation, Altagracia Gómez Sierra, is attending Davos, as well as several Mexican business leaders. 

Gómez Sierra will participate in a public panel dedicated to regional economic growth.

Bárcena, who heads Mexico’s Environment and Natural Resources Ministry (Semarnat), is scheduled to participate in four sessions at Davos — an open forum on climate resilience and security; industrial decarbonization as a growth strategy; opportunities in the ocean economy; and a new agreement on plastics.

She has attended several Davos Forums in the past, previously representing former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. She is one of several Latin American leaders attending this year, including Javier Milei of Argentina, Gustavo Petro of Colombia and Daniel Noboa of Ecuador.

Bárcena calls for faster progress on climate change

While this year’s summit has been marked by tension between U.S. President Donald Trump and his country’s European allies, Bárcena’s focus has been firmly fixed on environmental issues. In the first days of the forum, she called for the acceleration of a green energy transition and the expansion of the circular economy, stressing that current efforts are not enough to tackle the global climate crisis.

“We have an urgent need to move faster and on a larger scale,” said Bárcena.“The scale at which we are currently working is insufficient, and here in Davos, I am trying to ensure that I find companies capable of accelerating the process quickly.”

Bárcena told delegates that Mexico is currently working towards achieving net-zero carbon emissions, although it relies heavily on fossil fuels. 

“All societies need to decarbonize, and there are many ways to do so,” she said. “Of course, one is to eliminate fossil fuels, but a country like mine is probably not ready for that yet, although we are committed to doing so in the future and becoming a net-zero emissions country.”

The minister said that Mexico is currently developing three circular economy parks — for the reuse of tires, construction waste, solid waste and plastics — to reduce the impact on the environment and generate new value chains. 

Finally, Bárcena reiterated that Mexico is looking to establish partnerships with international companies and stakeholders to accelerate the country’s energy transition and strengthen circular economy projects.

With reports from El Economista, La Jornada and W radio

Opinion: Could Mexico make America great again? The energy equation

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A pipeline
Virtually all of the natural gas Mexico imports — over 99% — arrives via pipeline from the United States. (Unsplash)

Energy may be the most foundational pillar behind everything we’ve discussed so far: re-industrialization, nearshoring, AI and North American competitiveness. You don’t run factories, servers or supply chains without reliable, scalable and affordable power. Energy isn’t a side story — it’s the operating system of modern economic activity.

Mexico’s role in this system is often framed through an outdated oil lens.

Forty years ago, that framing made sense. In 1982, Mexico exported roughly $24 billion, and almost 65% of that was crude oil. Today, Mexico exports more than $620 billion, with oil representing just 3.5% of the total, while manufacturing accounts for nearly 90%. In other words, Mexico’s economy has transformed from being oil-dependent to manufacturing-driven — and manufacturing is, above all, energy-intensive.

This transformation has tied Mexico and the United States together through energy flows that are structural, not optional.

Natural gas: The backbone of integration

Mexico is the largest export market for U.S. natural gas. Over the past decade, pipeline exports from the United States to Mexico have surged. By early 2024, Mexico was importing roughly 3.1 billion cubic feet per day of natural gas, with more than 60% of its total consumption supplied through pipeline imports from the United States. Natural gas now anchors Mexico’s electricity generation, industrial production and export manufacturing — much of which directly supports U.S. supply chains.

Looking only at imports, the integration is even clearer: virtually all of the natural gas Mexico imports — over 99% — arrives via pipeline from the United States, reflecting a high degree of physical and commercial interdependence between the two energy systems, particularly U.S. producers in Texas, for whom Mexico has become a critical and stable export outlet.

Natural gas now anchors Mexico’s electricity generation, industrial production, and export manufacturing — much of which directly supports U.S. supply chains.

Refined products & crude: A circulatory system

Energy flows are not one-way. U.S. refineries maintain a strategic relationship with Mexico as a crude oil supplier. In 2024, they imported 169.9 million barrels of Mexican crude, accounting for roughly 7% of total U.S. crude imports. In turn, those refineries export gasoline, diesel, and petrochemicals back into Mexico.

The result is clear: under many trade measures, the United States now runs an energy surplus with Mexico, meaning the value of U.S. energy exports to Mexico exceeds the value of Mexican energy exports to the U.S. This surplus supports U.S. GDP, sustains jobs in energy production and refining, and strengthens America’s position in global energy markets.

Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, U.S. Imports by Country of Origin, Exports by Destination, U.S. Natural Gas Imports by Country and U.S. Natural Gas Exports and Re-Exports by Country.

Mutual benefits embedded in infrastructure

From the U.S. perspective, Mexico acts as a stable outlet for U.S. natural gas production. That matters because U.S. producers — particularly in the Permian Basin — face domestic pipeline constraints and limited LNG export capacity. Mexico’s demand absorbs incremental supply, supporting upstream investment, drilling activity and workforce utilization even when global markets are volatile.

As documented by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, this integration is neither temporary nor marginal. Pipeline shipments of U.S. natural gas to Mexico have increased by an order of magnitude since the early 2000s, and today the majority of U.S. pipeline exports flow south of the border rather than overseas.

U.S.-Mexico Border Crossing Natural Gas Pipelines and Expansions of Mexico’s Domestic Pipelines

Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration and Comisión Nacional de Hidrocarburos, Mexico. “U.S. natural gas pipeline exports to Mexico have grown in recent years as the domestic pipeline network within Mexico continues to expand.”

Why policy certainty matters

The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) plays a strategic role by providing investment certainty for cross-border energy infrastructure — pipelines, terminals and long-term contracts. Without that legal and institutional framework, it becomes far more difficult for energy companies to commit capital to multi-decade projects that underpin factories, grids, and industrial parks on both sides of the border.

This is why energy policy cannot be an afterthought in debates about economic strategy or geopolitical competition. Mexico is not peripheral to U.S. energy security — it is central to it. American energy production, refining, and export capacity are increasingly linked to Mexican demand, infrastructure, and industrial growth. Likewise, Mexico’s ability to sustain its manufacturing base and capture nearshoring opportunities depends on continued access to U.S. energy and predictable investment conditions.

If the United States wants to remain an energy powerhouse, it cannot do so alone. It’s not just about drilling in Texas or New Mexico — it’s about smart partnerships, strong trade frameworks and working closely with reliable neighbors.

Seen this way, energy fits naturally with the other themes in this series. If AI is the brain of the future economy, energy is the bloodstream. And today, that bloodstream flows across North America.

Catch up on parts 1-5 of Could Mexico make America great again? here:

Pedro Casas Alatriste is the Executive Vice President and CEO of the American Chamber of Commerce of Mexico (AmCham). Previously, he has been the Director of Research and Public Policy at the US-Mexico Foundation in Washington, D.C. and the Coordinator of International Affairs at the Business Coordinating Council (CCE). He has also served as a consultant to the Inter-American Development Bank.

Made in Mexico — By an American ambassador

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Dwight Morrow with Plutarco Elías Calles and Charles Lindbergh
Dwight Morrow (left), with Mexican President Plutarco Elías Calles and famed aviator Charles Lindbergh, was U.S. Ambassador to Mexico from 1927 to 1930. (INAH)

Dwight Morrow was not the first American ambassador to arrive in Mexico with the
promise of restoring order and protecting U.S. interests. But he was the rare one who
tried to do it without threatening an invasion. A century ago, in the late 1920s, this
Republican lawyer and former J.P. Morgan partner used breakfast diplomacy,
backchannel religious talks, and an early form of cultural soft power to defuse a
commercial crisis, mediate a religious war and help reshape how Mexico appeared in
the American imagination.

Mexico’s unrest, America’s money

To grasp Morrow’s significance, return to Mexico in the 1920s: a country still recovering
from revolution and rewriting the rules of sovereignty. The Constitution of 1917, notably
Article 27 declared that everything above, on and below Mexican soil belonged to the
nation. That principle directly challenged foreign oil concessions awarded during the
Porfirio Díaz era.

Plutarco Elías Calles
Morrow’s breakfast meetings with President Calles became known as “ham and egg diplomacy.” (Public Domain)

By 1920, Mexico was the world’s second-largest oil producer, home to Mexican Eagle (a
Royal Dutch/Shell subsidiary), Jersey Standard and Standard Oil. American and
European investors watched nervously: a nation with shifting politics and a new
constitution looked less like a neighbor and more like a precarious asset.

President Álvaro Obregón offered a stopgap in 1923, recognizing foreign property rights
in exchange for diplomatic recognition. His successor, Plutarco Elías Calles, later
deemed the agreement unconstitutional and issued fresh 50-year exploration permits,
enraging companies that believed their long-term claims had been secured.

Simultaneously, enforcement of Article 130 — curbing the Church’s political
role — sparked the Cristero War, a brutal conflict that drew appeals for U.S. intervention
from clerical networks. Mexico’s domestic battles had become entangled with foreign
business and public opinion.

The outgoing U.S. ambassador, James R. Sheffield, personified a hard line, reflecting
an older, force-first approach to Latin America. When Dwight Morrow, a senior partner
at J.P. Morgan & Co., which held much of Mexico’s US $514 million external debt, was
appointed ambassador in 1927, many Mexicans braced for “dollar diplomacy” in a
diplomatic coat and tails.

Made in Mexico: Dwight Morrow

‘Ham and eggs’ diplomacy

Morrow arrived with a different playbook. His strategy rested on three deceptively simple
principles: respect Mexican sovereignty, cultivate genuine personal ties with Mexican
leaders, and recast conflicts as legal problems rather than theatrical confrontations.
American papers nicknamed him “the ham and eggs diplomat” for his routine breakfasts
with President Calles. The label belied the seriousness of those meetings. Over morning coffee, the two men tested ideas, lowered tensions and created a private space
for candid negotiation.

When Calles raised the oil question, Morrow answered not with threats but with a lawyer’s framing: this was “a question of law.” By urging legal channels — Mexican courts and legal process — he enabled Calles to reach a compromise without appearing to capitulate to foreign pressure.

Dwight Morrow with Latin American leaders
Morrow, left, helped mediate a solution to Mexico’s religious conflicts during the Calles presidency. (Public Domain)

The 1927–28 oil settlement remains contested. In November 1927, Mexico’s Supreme
Court removed time limits on foreign concessions for companies that had undertaken
“positive acts” (drilling, infrastructure) before 1917. Nationalists denounced the decision
as a surrender to foreign interests; Morrow’s supporters hailed it as proof that diplomacy
and law could trump coercion. Historians today offer a nuanced view: Calles was by
then a pragmatic modernizer, and Morrow provided a diplomatic offramp that allowed
him to retreat from unsustainable positions while preserving domestic legitimacy.

Faith, violence and quiet deals

Morrow’s mediation in the Church–State conflict required a subtler touch than oil
diplomacy. In 1927, he joined Calles on a northern tour. It was an image that startled some: an American Protestant banker riding beside an anticlerical revolutionary general. For Calles, the gesture signaled that Morrow was there to enable settlement rather than
dictate terms.

Between 1928 and 1929, Morrow quietly coordinated talks between Vatican envoys and
Mexican officials. The June 1929 “arrangements” did not restore the Church’s
prerevolutionary privileges, but they halted open hostilities: public worship resumed,
priests registered and the Church stepped back from direct political activity while the
state retained legal ownership of ecclesiastical property but allowed effective control
over church life. The deal reduced bloodshed, eased refugee flows and stabilized a
tense border situation. For Morrow, religious pragmatism was crisis management: a
peaceful Mexico was also a secure one.

Soft power, Mexican style

If breakfasts and back channels stabilized politics, Morrow’s most imaginative initiatives
targeted perception. He understood that shaping how Americans viewed Mexico would
be as important as resolving legal disputes. So he turned to spectacle, personalities and
museums to make Mexico legible and attractive to U.S. audiences.

In December 1927, Charles Lindbergh, fresh from his transatlantic triumph, flew to
Mexico at Morrow’s invitation. More than 150,000 people greeted him in Mexico City;
Calles publicly welcomed the aviator. Lindbergh toured Xochimilco, watched Revolution
Day parades and was feted for a week. It was an upbeat counterstory to headlines about
unrest. The visit also yielded a humanizing subplot: Lindbergh met and later married Anne Morrow, the ambassador’s daughter. The romance drew American attention and
softened public perceptions, mixing glamour with diplomacy.

Canonizing “Mexicanness”

Morrow’s cultural diplomacy reached institutional heights in 1930 when the Metropolitan
Museum of Art in New York opened “Mexican Arts,” a sweeping exhibition of roughly
1,300 objects that had debuted months earlier in Mexico City. Backed by the Carnegie
Corporation and the American Federation of Arts, and energetically supported by
Morrow, the show presented pre-Hispanic artifacts alongside colonial works, modern
muralism and popular crafts. Morrow lent pieces from his collection and helped secure
funding.

Diego Rivera mural
Morrow commissioned Diego Rivera’s “History of Morelos, Conquest and Revolution” mural, seen here in the Palacio de Hernán Cortés in Cuernavaca. (Rodrigo SanSs/Wikimedia Commons)

The exhibition offered a curated argument: Mexico had deep historical roots and a
vibrant contemporary culture. Touring U.S. cities for two years, it helped recast Mexico
in American eyes from a land of uprisings and banditry to a nation with a continuous
civilizational story and modern ambitions. The narrative aligned neatly with Mexico’s
postrevolutionary nationbuilding project — mixing Indigenous and European elements
into a celebratory mestizo identity — while also channeling that narrative through
American tastes.

Rivera, revolution and a banker’s check

Morrow’s most provocative cultural gamble came in paint. In 1929, he commissioned
Diego Rivera’s mural “History of Morelos, Conquest and Revolution” for the Palacio de Hernán Cortés in Cuernavaca. Rivera and Frida Kahlo worked at Casa Mañana, the Morrows’
country home, while completing the fresco, which depicts conquest, exploitation and
peasant uprising with blunt political clarity. That a former J.P. Morgan partner would
finance a fresco criticising colonial domination looks paradoxical — and it was. Mexico’s
Communist Party accused Rivera of selling out; U.S. conservatives fretted that
American funds were underwriting radical art.

Morrow’s logic was pragmatic: supporting Mexican artists, even when their work was
politically charged, signaled respect for Mexico’s cultural autonomy and helped
normalize its government before foreign audiences. A portion of Rivera’s work later
toured U.S. museums, linking Mexican muralism to the American art world.

Elizabeth Morrow’s curated Mexico

Elizabeth Cutter Morrow was no mere hostess. She turned Casa Mañana into a living
display of textiles, ceramics and folk objects, organized exhibitions of Mexican crafts in
the United States and wrote for American audiences about Mexican art. Her aesthetic
smoothed Mexico into a cohesive mestizo image, one appealing and accessible to U.S.
patrons, but which tended to obscure the poverty and marginalization behind many crafts.

Still, her efforts connected artisans with collectors and institutions, institutionalizing a
form of bilateral cultural exchange that endured, however unequal its dynamics.

The shadow of J.P. Morgan

Morrow formally resigned from J.P. Morgan on taking the ambassadorship, but his
banking past mattered. The bank’s role in financing Mexico’s foreign debt and Wall
Street’s interest in Mexican stability gave his appointment immediate market effects:
bond prices rose on news he was taking the post. Morrow was, at bottom, a
businessman in diplomatic guise. He delivered what American capital wanted — manageable debt, protection for oil interests and no sweeping expropriations—yet did so through negotiation that preserved Mexican dignity.

A shared project of modernity

Anne Morrow
Dwight Morrow’s daughter Anne, flanked by President John F. Kennedy and her husband, Charles Lindbergh.

Plutarco Elías Calles was a pragmatic modernizer, not a radical like Zapata or Villa. He
sought to build a postrevolutionary state through schools, infrastructure and a cultural
program that recovered Indigenous pasts and fostered national cohesion. Morrow’s
diplomacy complemented that agenda. By promoting Mexican art and culture in the
United States, he lent international validation to Mexico’s nation-building narrative.
In return, Americans were offered a reassuring story of a neighbor on a path to stability.

Dwight Morrow embodied a paradox. He defended U.S. interests within an unequal
system, but he chose negotiation, legal process and cultural engagement over coercion.
He did not upend the power imbalance between nations, yet his methods reduced
violence and allowed Mexico’s postrevolutionary state to consolidate legitimacy without
the spectacle of foreign intervention.

A century on, Morrow’s tenure offers a practical lesson: diplomacy that respects
sovereignty, leans on law and pairs political negotiation with cultural exchange can
defuse crises and reshape perceptions. That approach does not erase the realities of
power; it simply shows that skillful, respectful engagement can prevent escalation and
open channels for mutual understanding.

In 1927, when military intervention remained conceivable, that was a significant achievement — and one worth remembering whenever international relations risk being reduced to slogans rather than solved through sustained, patient diplomacy.

Maria Meléndez writes for Mexico News Daily in Mexico City.

Mexico sends 37 alleged criminals to US in third major prisoner transfer

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members of Mexico's military lined up and preparing to transfer criminals to the United States by airplane
Among the prisoners transferred to the U.S. were Ricardo González Sauceda, identified as a regional leader of the Northeast Cartel, and Pedro Inzunza Noriega, father of the second-in-command of the Beltrán Leyva Organization. (@OHarfuch/X)

The Mexican government on Tuesday sent 37 convicted and alleged criminals to the United States, the third large transfer of imprisoned cartel figures to the U.S. since President Claudia Sheinbaum took office.

The latest transfer came amid heightened security tensions between Mexico and the United States, as President Donald Trump said earlier this month that the U.S. military would begin “hitting” Mexican cartels on land. It appeared to be an attempt by the Mexican government to appease the Trump administration, which has recently ramped up pressure on Mexico to do more to combat cartels and the narcotics they traffic to the U.S.

Mexican Security Minister Omar García Harfuch announced the prisoner transfer on social media, writing on X that “37 operators of criminal organizations who represented a real threat to the security of the country” were flown to various cities in the United States on seven Mexican military planes.

“The action was carried out in accordance with the National Security Act and under bilateral cooperation mechanisms, with full respect for national sovereignty,” he wrote.

García Harfuch said that the Mexican government received a commitment from the U.S. Justice Department that it would not seek the death penalty against any of the transferred prisoners, among whom are members or alleged members of various criminal groups, including the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), the Sinaloa Cartel, the Northeast Cartel, the Beltrán Leyva Organization and the Gulf Cartel.

With the transfer of the prisoners — all of whom were wanted by U.S. authorities — “92 high-impact criminals” have been sent to the United States during the current administration, the security minister said.

Those people “will no longer be able to generate violence in our country,” García Harfuch wrote in a post that included footage of heavily armored Security Ministry vehicles leaving the Altiplano maximum security prison in México state. The transferred prisoners were held in various prisons in Mexico prior to being put on military planes to be flown to the U.S.

The Sheinbaum administration’s first large transfer of cartel figures to the United States occurred last February when 29 people, including notorious drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero, were sent north. A second transfer of 26 organized crime figures occurred in August.

Mexico transfers 26 cartel figures to US in second major prisoner handover this year

Since Sheinbaum took office in October 2024, the Mexican government has ramped up enforcement against cartels, arresting tens of thousands of suspects, seizing large quantities of drugs and weapons and dismantling around 2,000 clandestine drug laboratories.

It has recently won praise for its efforts from U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ron Johnson, who wrote on social media last week that the security relationship between the United States and Mexico is the “most cooperative and mutually beneficial … in decades.”

Who was transferred to the US on Tuesday?

García Harfuch said that the criminal group operators were transported to Washington D.C, Houston, New York, Pennsylvania, San Antonio and San Diego.

Among the prisoners transferred to the U.S. were Ricardo González Sauceda, identified as a regional leader of the Northeast Cartel, and Pedro Inzunza Noriega, father of the second-in-command of the Beltrán Leyva Organization.

Inzunza, known as “El Señor de la Silla” (The Lord of the Chair), was arrested on Dec. 31. He is accused of running a drug production and trafficking network, primarily dealing in fentanyl, with a direct impact on the U.S. market. The U.S. Justice Department noted last May that “Pedro Inzunza Noriega and his son, Pedro Inzunza Coronel, are charged with narco-terrorism, drug trafficking and money laundering as key leaders of the Beltran Leyva Organization (BLO), a powerful and violent faction of the Sinaloa Cartel.”

Pedro Inzunza
Pedro Inzunza is accused of running a drug production and trafficking network, primarily dealing in fentanyl. (FGR)

Another prisoner sent to the U.S. on Thursday was Juan Pablo Bastidas Erenas, allegedly a logistics operator for the BLO. The Reforma newspaper reported that he had a “direct relationship” with Fausto Isidro Meza Flores, aka “El Chapo Isidro,” leader of the BLO.

Among the other crime figures sent to the U.S. were:

  • María Del Rosario Navarro Sánchez, the only woman transferred to the U.S. on Tuesday. The Associated Press reported that she is “the first Mexican citizen to face charges in the U.S. for providing support to a terrorist organization, after being accused of conspiring with a cartel,” namely the CJNG.
  • Daniel Alfredo Blanco Joo, an alleged Sinaloa Cartel logistics operator accused of smuggling drugs into the U.S.
  • José Luis Sánchez Valencia, an alleged CJNG member who is reportedly an uncle of Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, the Jalisco Cartel’s top leader.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Department of Justice published a full list of the 37 “fugitives” taken into custody in the United States on Tuesday evening.

“Among the fugitives taken into U.S. custody are prolific human smugglers, violent arms traffickers, and alleged members of dangerous drug cartels,” the Justice Department said.

“This is another landmark achievement in the Trump Administration’s mission to destroy the cartels,” said U.S. Attorney General Pamela Bondi.

“These 37 cartel members — including terrorists from the Sinaloa Cartel, CJNG, and others — will now pay for their crimes against the American people on American soil,” she said.

An ‘offering’ to the US?

Carlos Pérez Ricart, an organized crime expert and academic at the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics, told The New York Times that the latest transfer of prisoners is “an offering” to the Trump administration.

He said that the handover of 37 people on Tuesday is “far from a magic solution” to ward off pressure from Trump. “But at least the Mexican government is buying itself some time,” Pérez told the Times.

David Mora, a Mexico analyst at the International Crisis Group, told the Associated Press that as pressure increases from the Trump administration, “as demands from the White House dial up,” the Mexican government “needs to resort to extraordinary measures, such as these transfers.”

The federal government has rejected that it is giving in to pressure from the U.S. president by making the prisoner transfers.

On Wednesday morning, Sheinbaum said that the U.S. Justice Department requested the transfer of the prisoners, but the decision to send them north was a “sovereign” one taken by her government.

“[The interests of] Mexico are put first, above all else, no matter what others may ask for. It is a sovereign decision and is analyzed based on considerations of security policy,” she said.

After the first transfer of prisoners last February, García Harfuch said there was a risk that some of the 29 defendants sent to the U.S. could have been released from prison if they remained in Mexico. Judicial corruption has long been a problem in Mexico, although the current government asserts that its judicial reform, including the popular election of judges, will remedy the situation.

Opposition lawmakers and legal experts have “disputed the political and legal grounds for the prisoner transfers,” Reuters reported.

However, Pérez, the Times reported, “said that the legal and political debate surrounding the transfers have subsided since the first one last year, in part, because Mr. Trump’s military action in Venezuela has made his threats more real.”

Still, National Action Party (PAN) lawmaker Kenia López, president of the Chamber of Deputies, called for transparency regarding the legal procedures involved in the transfer on Tuesday. PAN Deputy Héctor Saúl Téllez asserted that extradition processes aren’t being respected, and called on the government to explain whether there is an “agreement that allows this kind of handover” or whether it is ceding to pressure from Trump.

The latest transfer of the prisoners came eight days after Sheinbaum spoke to Trump by telephone. On Wednesday morning, Sheinbaum said that the handover wasn’t related in any way to her conversation with her U.S. counterpart.

She requested the call in light of Trump’s remarks about striking cartels on land, and after speaking with the U.S. president asserted that U.S. military action in Mexico could be ruled out.

With reports from Milenio, Reforma, The New York Times, AP and Reuters

Mexico’s cultural heartbeat pulses through Madrid as FITUR opens in the Spanish capital

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a monumental sculpture of Madrid’s symbol, the Bear and the Madroño, featuring a Huichol design
Mexican artist César Menchaca created a monumental sculpture of Madrid’s symbol, the Bear and the Madroño, featuring a Huichol design. (@josefinarodzam/X)

The 46th edition of the International Tourism Fair (FITUR), held every year in Madrid, Spain, kicked off today with Mexico taking center stage as the fair’s partner country 

Regarded as one of the world’s largest fairs in the tourism industry, the event will take place from Jan. 21 to 25 at IFEMA Madrid, with three days dedicated to professionals (21-23) and two days for the general public (24-25).

As partner country, Mexico is presenting a comprehensive program that will showcase the essence of Mexicanidad to the global tourism market, both at the fair’s venue and at iconic venues around the city. 

Boasting the largest pavilion in the fair’s Americas section, all 32 Mexican states are represented at FITUR  with a program highlighting the promotion of emerging destinations, outdoor and nature-based experiences, pueblos mágicos and cultural and culinary experiences. 

Present at FITUR this year are Mexico’s artisans, entrepreneurs and tourist operators who aim to position the country as a unified destination, rather than a collection of isolated regions. 

As part of the promotional activities during the five-day event, Mexico’s stand will host cultural performances such as the Guelaguetza of Oaxaca and the Danza de los Viejitos of Michoacán, in addition to a shop selling Mexican handicrafts. Other activities will promote the 2026 FIFA World Cup, taking place in Mexico, Canada and the United States. 

Mexican authorities have said that the country’s partnership with FITUR is a strategic opportunity to strengthen Mexico’s image before an international audience, in line with the current administration’s goal of positioning Mexico among the five most-visited destinations in the world by 2040.

“Today, we are aiming for more,” Mexican ambassador to Spain, Quirino Ordaz Coppel, said. “We don’t just want more tourists: we want more investment, more spending, greater connectivity and a strengthened sector. This forum will allow us to share the vision of the Ministry of Tourism within a Mexican government that is committed to tourism as a generator of economic benefits, with one key word: shared prosperity,” he told reporters

Tourism delegates pose for a picture at the Veracruz room at FITUR in Madrid
All 32 Mexican states have a designated room within Mexico’s flagship pavilion as the partner country of this year’s FITUR. (@SECTUR_mx/X)

Overall, FITUR features nine pavilions, 10,000 companies from 161 countries — of which 111 have official representation — and 967 main exhibitors. 

Beyond the pavilion

As part of Mexico’s promotional activities beyond IFEMA, different parts of Madrid are showcasing Mexican culture through art installations. 

One such display is located at the Puerta del Sol, one of the city’s most visited areas. In this public plaza, the partner countries have installed a monumental sculpture of Madrid’s symbol, the Bear and the Madroño, featuring a design that blends Mexican and Spanish heritage.

Traditionally crafted from bronze, the iconic representation of Madrid’s identity has been reinterpreted by Mexican artist César Menchaca. The monument is now adorned with a colorful and intricate design inspired by Huichol art. 

“The Bear and the Strawberry Tree is a profound symbol of Madrid, an emblem that speaks of its history and identity. To be able to engage with it through contemporary art is an honor,” said Menchaca.

Meanwhile, the giant retailer El Corte Inglés on Serrano Street now features a “Ventana a México” (Window to Mexico), a designated space for the promotion and marketing of Mexican handicrafts. 

With reports from Publimetro and Milenio

MND Local: Guadalajara January news roundup

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Guadalajara
Mexico's cultural capital is no less busy than the administrative one. MND Local takes a look at what's been happening in Guadalajara in recent weeks. (Above Us Only Sky)

At Mexico News Daily, our mission has always been to deliver quality journalism that reflects the diverse stories, voices, and experiences across Mexico. As the country’s second-largest metropolitan area and a vital economic and cultural hub, Guadalajara deserves dedicated attention that goes beyond occasional headlines.

Today, we’re excited to announce the launch of regular, in-depth coverage of the Guadalajara region. This expansion represents our commitment to bringing you closer to the communities, innovations, and challenges that shape life in Jalisco’s capital and surrounding areas.

Our new Guadalajara section will feature comprehensive reporting on local government, business developments, cultural events, and the issues that matter most to residents. From the historic streets of Tlaquepaque to the tech corridors of Zapopan, we’ll explore the stories that define this dynamic region.

Quality local journalism matters now more than ever. By investing in dedicated Guadalajara coverage, we’re ensuring that readers — whether they’re local residents, expats, visitors, or those considering a move to the region — have access to reliable, nuanced reporting that captures the full picture of life in Mexico’s Pearl of the West.

2026 begins with critical repairs to Guadalajara’s water systems

(Plantas de tratamiento en Jalisco)

Earlier this month, 892 neighborhoods across the Guadalajara metro area experienced disruptions to their water service as the public utility SIAPA addressed critical infrastructure issues.

The affected areas included Tonalá (375 neighborhoods), Tlaquepaque (247 neighborhoods), Guadalajara (205 neighborhoods), and Zapopan (65 neighborhoods), spanning more than 2 million residents and 800,000 customer accounts. These areas are primarily supplied by the Miravalle and Las Huertas water treatment plants. 

With a budget of 38.4 million pesos ($2.1 million USD), SIAPA stated that the work was urgently needed to prevent major failures, reduce the risk of system collapse, and ensure the safe operation of the metropolitan area’s main water system.

Among the most critical system components addressed was the electrical substation at the Chapala Pumping Plant, a facility that has been in service for 34 years without meaningful improvements. This substation supplies power to the pumping and control equipment that transports water from Guadalajara’s main water source. 

In addition to improvements to the Chapala substation, SIAPA’s work this month involved replacing power circuit breakers, Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) meters, hardware, surge arresters, and disconnect switches, as well as installing new control panels and reprogramming electromechanical equipment. The ultimate goal is to improve the quality and reliability of water service across the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area.

While the work was underway, residents of the affected neighborhoods experienced low water pressure or a complete cutoff. To mitigate the inconvenience, local officials mounted a special operation to distribute drinking water to affected residents via hundreds of water trucks and stationary tanks around the city. 

As of January 6, SIAPA reported that water services had been fully restored to its customers. Moreover, this month’s intervention eliminates the need for additional maintenance to the system in 2026, traditionally completed over the Semana Santa week.

Guadalajara Airport adds 4 new international routes

Guadalajara International Airport
(Aeropuerto Internacional de Guadalajara/Facebook)

As the city prepares to welcome millions of visitors for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, expanded international service is being added at Guadalajara airport to support the anticipated increase in demand. New flights launching in recent weeks connect Guadalajara with Calgary (WestJet), Montreal (Air Transat), Toronto (Air Canada), and Bogotá, Colombia (Volaris). These new routes are expected to support continued passenger growth at Guadalajara’s international airport in 2026. 

WestJet’s non-stop flights between Calgary (YYC) and Guadalajara are offered twice weekly, on  Tuesdays & Sundays. This service was originally conceived as a seasonal winter route, but was recently extended to year-round service.  

Air Transat offers nonstop flights from Montreal (YUL) to Guadalajara (GDL), twice weekly on Thursdays and Saturdays. This service is expected to run through mid-year in 2026.

The two new Canadian routes come on top of two other international destinations added late last year. In November 2025, Air Canada began offering nonstop service between Toronto and Guadalajara three times a week, and Volaris began nonstop service between Guadalajara and Bogota, Colombia twice weekly.

According to Michelle Fridman Hirsch, Jalisco’s Secretary of Tourism, the state is also in talks with several European carriers about potential new destinations. This is exciting news for Guadalajara’s five million residents, who would no doubt embrace more connectivity to Europe, building on Aeroméxico’s successful introduction of a Guadalajara to Madrid route in 2021. 

Air pollution reached record levels in 2025

(Lab CSA)

Air quality in the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area set a dubious record in 2025, with a dramatic increase in days with unhealthy air compared to 2024.

According to the official report “Air Quality Statistics 2025,” issued by the Ministry of Environment and Territorial Development (Semadet), Guadalajara’s metro area saw 239 days with poor air quality in 2025. The rate was nearly five times higher than in 2024, when the city experienced 68 days with air pollution exceeding recommended safety levels.

As in prior years, Guadalajara’s worst air pollution in 2025 was recorded on the south side. Guadalajara’s southern neighborhoods see higher industrial emissions, alongside epic traffic congestion and less tree cover than other parts of town. On top of those man-made contributors, the south side’s lower elevation, combined with thermal inversions, exacerbates pollution levels in winter.

The most dangerous pollutants afflicting Guadalajara are PM10 and PM2.5 particles. These terms refer to the types of particulate matter (PM) in the air, based on their size. PM10 particles are small enough to enter human lungs, whereas PM2.5 particles are so small that they can pass into the bloodstream.

Despite multiple initiatives by the state government to improve the city’s air quality, results in 2025 suggest the need to find new and better ways to improve air quality, to fulfill Jalisco’s public health and environmental sustainability goals. 

Public transportation set to rise 27%

(Urban Transport Magazine)

The general fare charged for the city’s public transportation is increasing from 11 pesos to 14 pesos in 2026. The new fare, which will take effect in April 2026, affects passengers on all modes of public transport, including buses and light rail.

As part of the deal, service providers committed to a fare freeze from 2026 to 2030, meaning that no additional price hikes will occur until after 2030. Public transportation authorities have also committed to numerous improvements, including increasing the frequency of routes, hiring more staff, putting more focus on safety, and increasing operator pay to improve quality.

For senior citizens, teachers, people with disabilities, and heads of household, a 50% fare reduction is available, while Mexican citizens with the “La Única” card will be eligible for a subsidy, paying only 11 pesos. Additionally, following a successful negotiation with student activists, students with a valid ID will be eligible to ride public transit for 5 pesos. 

Despite the concessions to vulnerable groups, many Guadalajara residents remain displeased with the fare hike. A public march on January 13th attracted an estimated 500 people, with one participant stating flatly, “The quality of transport is not worth the increase.” 

After discovering that life in Mexico was a lot more fun than working in corporate America, Dawn Stoner moved to Guadalajara in 2022, where she lives with her husband, two cats and Tapatío rescue dog. Her blog livewellmexico.com helps expats live their best life south of the border.