[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Cash Jordan: 270,000 Illegals ‘Forcibly Returned’ To Mexico… as Los Angeles COLLAPSES

Russia’s AI Drone Swarms- New and Effective

Fed Bailout “IMMINENT” as Yield Curve Control Becomes Only Option

Tucker Carlson: We are headed to a dictatorship

Carnival Cruise Boarding Fight

Court Upholds Nearly $1 Million Fine Against Restaurant That Ignored Pandemic Indoor Dining Ban

Lefties Losing It - Power Hour

Conspiracy Connections

(Must Watch) Tucker Carlson David Collum

DeSantis sends Lt. Gov to bring illegal migrant back to Florida to face charges for crash killing 3

Authorities Hit White Man Who Was Savagely Beaten During Cincinnati Brawl with a Criminal Charge

Cash Jordan: Illegals PLUNDER Denver… Walgreens Shuts 13 Stores

2026 Year without a summer

Daniela Cambone: Marc Faber Weighs 100% All-In Gold Play

Trump ‘running circles’ around world leaders as weak Starmer in ‘spotlight’ for failing the UK

Trump Demands Fed Governor "Must Resign Now" Over Mortgage Fraud Probe

African Countries Can't Practice Maintenance

How a Fake Engineer DESTROYED South Africa’s Railway System

Israel DEMANDS X Remove Posts and X COMPLIES

Cash Jordan: 19 Supermarkets FLEE Washington... "It's WORSE Than Venezuela"

Capital faces federal probe after police accused of falsifying crime data

China’s Quantum Radar COULD EXPOSE Every U.S. Submarine on Earth

Coming soon

External Debt By Countries 2025 (MUST SEE)

Future Headline

A Palestinian beauty queen will take part in the Miss Universe pageant later this year

Mamdani's "Affordability" Agenda Could Be Extremely Costly

Restoring Law & Order In Crime-Ridden Cities May Be Key To Resolving Affordability Crisis

Cash Jordan: Moped 'Army' TERRORIZES DC... Trump ERASES 'Entire UBER Workforce' in 23 Hours

CAMPI FLEGREI SUPERVOLCANO. BUBBLING BEACH WATER


Immigration
See other Immigration Articles

Title: Mexican Campaign Focuses on Migration
Source: Excite News
URL Source: http://apnews.excite.com/article/20060118/D8F78N8O2.html
Published: Jan 18, 2006
Author: Will Weissert
Post Date: 2006-01-18 16:55:18 by Zipporah
Keywords: Migration, Campaign, Mexican
Views: 255
Comments: 3

MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexico's presidential campaign is focusing on the millions who leave for better-paying jobs in the United States, with candidates promising to create better opportunities at home while railing against American immigration policies.

Illegal migration should again seize the spotlight Thursday, when the three major presidential hopefuls begin official campaigning after a Christmas break mandated by the country's electoral body.

Although they disagree on almost everything else, the top candidates for the July 2 election have all pledged to bolster the economy and attract international investment to make Mexican jobs attractive enough to keep people from heading north.

President Vicente Fox made the same promises before his 2000 election, but migration continued unabated.

Fox had said he would expand the economy by 7 percent a year. When economic doldrums struck worldwide after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, however, the president was forced to downgrade his domestic growth forecasts.

The current administration also struggled for a migration accord with Washington that would grant legal status to many of the estimated 6 million undocumented Mexicans in the United States.

But no agreement is likely before Fox leaves office on Dec. 1. He is limited by the constitution to a single six-year term.

Mexican politicians have been promising for decades to reduce migration to the United States, but simply creating new jobs isn't enough, political analyst Jose Antonio Crespo said.

"Many illegal (migrants) are now more educated and have opportunities in Mexico but prefer jobs in the United States," he said. "Even with illegal jobs, the pay is higher."

The migration issue will be most visible Thursday when presidential candidate Roberto Madrazo holds a rally in Izucar de Matamoros, referred to by some as a ghost town because much of its population has left for the United States.

Madrazo, whose Institutional Revolutionary Party controlled Mexico's presidency from its founding in 1929 until losing to Fox, says he is serious about keeping would-be migrants from leaving Mexico in a way the current administration - and seven decades of governments controlled by his party - were not.

For months, the race's front-runner has been Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who resigned as Mexico City's mayor to run for president with the leftist Democratic Revolution Party.

His lead has diminished in recent months, however.

A poll published Wednesday by the Mexico City daily Milenio had the former mayor ahead with 37 percent compared to 31 percent for Felipe Calderon of Fox's National Action Party. Madrazo was one point behind Calderon. The newspaper interviewed 1,000 adults from across Mexico between Jan. 12 and 16. The margin of error was 3.2 percentage points.

Lopez Obrador is opening his campaign in Metlatonoc, a southern town with the lowest standard of living in Mexico as measured by a 2004 U.N. report on Human Development.

Lopez Obrador says it pains him to see Mexicans risk their lives sneaking across the U.S. border. He says economic reform is not about ideology but necessity.

Mexicans have condemned a bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives that would build 700 miles of additional border fences in California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. The proposal also would make illegal entry a felony and enlist military and local police to help stop undocumented migrants.

"It has intensified the issue, and anti-American sentiment is growing," Crespo said. "A wall is very symbolic and sends a message."

Calderon has said that "instead of labor going to where the capital is, we will make it so investment comes here to where our people are."

That is good news to Samuel Chavez, a Mexico City engineer who has two uncles and four cousins living illegally in California.

"Fox said the right things but we need a candidate who can bring home a migration agreement," he said. "Mexico needs results, not good intentions."

Crespo and other analysts say Mexican limits on foreign investment in the oil industry and other key sectors have hindered a cash infusion from abroad that might spur true economic reform.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Zipporah (#0)

Calderon has said that "instead of labor going to where the capital is, we will make it so investment comes here to where our people are."

That is good news to Samuel Chavez, a Mexico City engineer who has two uncles and four cousins living illegally in California.

Next year he'll have 4 uncles and 8 cousins living illegally in California. Makes no difference what they do.

If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy.
~James Madison

robin  posted on  2006-01-18   17:16:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: robin (#1)

Next year he'll have 4 uncles and 8 cousins living illegally in California. Makes no difference what they do.

isnt that the truth.. heck why not just let them all move out and into the US and we can take Mexico?

Zipporah  posted on  2006-01-18   19:20:34 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Zipporah (#0)

I was at a social gathering recently and heard a story from a fellow who is american trying to work in mexico selling real estate. the government of mexico kicked him out because he is american. the reality is that americans are not allowed to live down there unless you bring lots of money. but mexicans are welcomed here. since 1970 about 30% of mexico has moved to the US.

Red Jones  posted on  2006-01-19   9:42:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]