The News
Thursday 25 of April 2024

Mexico's New Treasury Secretary Spurns Donald Trump


Mexico's Teasury and Public Finance Secretary José Antonio Meade Kuribreña (R) shake hands with Chamber of Deputies chairman Javier Bolanos after handing over the 2017 budget in Mexico City,photo: Reuters/Carlos Jasso
Mexico's Teasury and Public Finance Secretary José Antonio Meade Kuribreña (R) shake hands with Chamber of Deputies chairman Javier Bolanos after handing over the 2017 budget in Mexico City,photo: Reuters/Carlos Jasso
José Antonio Meade Kuribreña said, "absolutely the only thing I agree on with candidate Trump is that Luis Videgaray is an exceptional public servant"

MEXICO CITY – Mexico’s new Treasury and Public Finance secretary (SHCP) on Thursday delivered a stern reproach to Donald Trump, saying the only thing he agreed on with the U.S. Republican presidential candidate was that his predecessor in the ministry was an excellent public servant.

The comments follow the resignation of Luis Videgaray as treasury secretary on Wednesday after he came under fire for Trump’s visit to Mexico City last week, which Mexican diplomats said he was instrumental in arranging.

Trump has infuriated Mexicans with a series of broadsides against the United States’ southern neighbor, and his hastily arranged visit to meet President Enrique Peña Nieto a week ago sparked heavy criticism of the government.

Presenting the government’s 2017 budget plan just a day after his appointment, the new treasury secretary, José Antonio Meade Kuribreña, did not mince his words when he was asked about recent comments by Trump on Videgaray at a news conference.

“I’d like to point out that the only thing, absolutely the only thing I agree on with candidate Trump is that Luis Videgaray is an exceptional public servant,” Meade Kuribreña said.

The outspoken U.S. real estate mogul has vowed to make Mexico pay for a border wall to keep out illegal immigrants, as well as threatening to carry out mass deportations and tear up trade treaties crucial to its economy.

Late on Wednesday, Trump commented on Videgaray’s resignation on NBC television when he was asked if the United States could take a chance with him as commander-in-chief.

“Well, I think absolutely,” he said. “I think if you saw what happened in Mexico the other day … I let them know where the United States stands. I mean, we’ve been badly hurt by Mexico … And if you look at what happened, look at the aftermath today where the people that arranged the trip in Mexico have been forced out of government. That’s how well we did.”

In an apparent u-turn on those remarks, on Thursday Trump tweeted his appreciation for Videgaray, who was widely seen as Peña Nieto’s closest advisor in the Cabinet.

“Mexico has lost a brilliant finance minister and wonderful man who I know is highly respected by President Peña Nieto,” he said. “With Luis, Mexico and the United States would have made wonderful deals together — where both Mexico and the United States would have benefitted.”

Meade Kuribreña, a friend of Videgaray’s, was foreign relations secretary when Trump launched his presidential bid in June 2015. He later moved to another secretariat before his appointment on Wednesday as treasury secretary, a job he also held in the previous government.

JEAN LUIS ARCE
DAVE GRAHAM
ANDREW HAY