Mexico president holds massive rally ahead of 2024 elections


Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador is holding a massive rally in Mexico City’s main plaza with tens of thousands of people

It may be one of the last rallies that will be headed by López Obrador, who is known for his folksy style and charisma. The process to nominate a presidential candidate for his Morena party will began later this year. After that, the party’s candidate is likely to take center stage.

But most agree that few of the presidential hopefuls can match the popularity of a president whose approval ratings are routinely above 60%. That is especially true for the Morena party, which was largely built around López Obrador.

Alberto Martínez, 59, said he hoped Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum would be the party’s nominee. “We like her education, her prudence,” Martinez said. But he would settle for anyone Morena choose.

Most polls show Sheinbaum as the front-runner in the race, followed by Foreign Relations Secretary Marcelo Ebrard.

“The important thing is for the ideology of López Obrador to continue,” Martínez said. “This train is already in motion, somebody just to get aboard and drive it.”

Former President Lázaro Cárdenas, one of López Obrador’s heroes, delighted Mexicans when he expropriated the largely foreign-owned, privately operated oil industry on March 18, 1938.

One of López Obrador’s main policy initiatives has been to save the state-owned oil company that Cárdenas founded from crushing debt and low oil production.

Those attending the rally in the Zocalo whole-heartedly approved of López Obrador, who has struck a nationalist stance, drastically reducing the ability of U.S. anti-drug agents to operate in Mexico.

Blas Ramos, 69, an electrical engineer, held up a sign reading “Get out of Mexico, FBI, CIA, Gringos!”

He said the president was right to oppose U.S. calls to designate Mexican drug cartels as terrorist organizations or to use the U.S. military to crack down on the gangs.

López Obrador has claimed that Mexico doesn’t produce fentanyl — something most experts disagree with — and that the U.S. has a fentanyl problem because American families don’t hug their kids enough.

Ramos was confident that the president’s movement, which he calls “the fourth transformation of Mexico,” would not end when he leaves office in September 2024.

“This is a movement that began a long time ago,” he said. “We have spent our whole lives…



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