MI’s Mexico Foreign Press Chatter – August 22, 2025

Bilateral tensions remained front and center. In the story of the week, the WSJ looked at the human side of the U.S. immigration crackdown, chronicling the story of a Venezuelan family that fled hardship and braved jungles and gangs – only to end up stranded in Ciudad Juárez, an allegory of the fading promise of the American dream. ‘Let’s see if the American dream can turn into the Latin American dream’, said the father wistfully.

Then, in a sign of the tension of the times, two notable columnists made the case that President Trump should not, in fact, bomb Mexico. Mary Anastasia O’Grady, a frequent Mexico critic in the WSJ, argued that American intervention would only ‘strengthen the worst, most corrupt elements of the ruling Morena party’. For his part, Ioan Grillo, a renowned, long-time reporter of organized crime, writing in the NYT cautioned that ‘the vast networks of organized crime and the U.S. drug market that keeps them going can’t be so easily blown away’.

Less auspiciously, the NYT reported President Sheinbaum surprisingly denied that her administration was cooperating with the DEA, after the agency announced a ‘bold’ bilateral initiative. ‘The DEA issues the statement, we don’t know based on what’, said Sheinbaum. One who will indeed cooperate is El Mayo Zambada – the Times reported he’s expected to plead guilty to ‘sweeping trafficking charges’.

On the domestic front, the Financial Times wrote of the ‘fractures’ within Morena, as Sheinbaum must balance placating Trump with maintaining unity in her ‘unwieldy’ party. Meanwhile, Security Secretary Omar García Harfuch enjoyed much better press, with a distinctly positive profile on Bloomberg, which quoted a former US official describing him as ‘probably the best interlocutor on the Mexican side’, and noting ‘many Mexicans call him Batman’. Violence, unfortunately, also made the headlines, with the BBC reporting on the discovery of human remains in Tlaxcala, while The Guardian profiled Las Nombramos Bordando, a collective that embroiders the names of femicide victims with mothers, daughters, and activists, turning grief into a ‘Trojan horse’ protest across Mexico.

On the economy and business, The Guardian reported the ‘historic’ reduction in the poverty rate – while noting that access to healthcare remains a key challenge. Ranchers and their struggle against the screwworm saw a third consecutive week of deep dives, now by Reuters. And Bloomberg covered the changing of the guard at Nubank’s Mexican operations, as well as an upbeat interview with JPMorgan’s Mexico head, who expects capital markets to bounce back.

Shifting gears, the NYT eulogized Rodrigo Moya, the Colombian-Mexican photojournalist whose lens captured the turbulence and transformations of mid-20th-century Latin America. His portraits of figures like Che Guevara, Celia Cruz and Gabriel García Márquez became iconic, even as much of his socially charged work remained unpublished for decades before later gaining global recognition. A ‘committed Marxist’ who later became ‘disillusioned with armed leftists and with the self-censorship of the Mexican press’, he described his photography as ‘documentary, realist, humanist and ideologically committed’. May he rest in peace.

Lastly, on this week’s MexMoves, Damian and Eduardo interview academic Andrew Paxman on the history of U.S.–Mexico business ties. They also break down McCormick’s $750M deal with Herdez; analyze the banking shake-up involving Intercam, CIBanco, Kapital, and Multiva; and discuss the CEO change at Nu México. You can listen to it here.

Photo of the Week

Rodrigo Moya’s 1976 image of a battered, grinning Mr. García Márquez was published in the Mexican newspaper La Jornada in 2007, inspiring years of literary gossip. Mr. Moya passed away on July 30 at his home in Cuernavaca.

 

FOREIGN PRESS COVERAGE

They Set Out to Find the American Dream. They’re Stuck in a Mexican Nightmare.

08/21/25, The Wall Street Journal, Kejal Vyas

 

Don’t Bomb Mexico, Mr. President

08/17/25, The Wall Street Journal, Mary Anastasia O’Grady

 

The Folly of Trump’s Cartel-Bombing Fantasy

08/21/25, The New York Times, Ioan Grillo

 

Mexico’s President Denies New D.E.A. Partnership Against Cartels

08/19/25, The New York Times, Jack Nicas and Emiliano Rodríguez Mega

 

Sinaloa Cartel Founder Expected to Plead Guilty to Trafficking Charges

08/18/25, The New York Times, Santul Nerkar and Alan Feuer

 

US-Mexico border wall to be painted black to stop climbers

08/20/25, BBC, Bernd Debusmann Jr

 

Facing Trump’s Threats, Mexico and Canada Draw Closer. Will It Last?

08/20/25, The New York Times, Emiliano Rodríguez Mega and Ian Austen

 

Mexico, Guatemala and Belize to create tri-national nature reserve to protect Mayan jungle

08/15/25, AP News, Sonia Pérez and Megan Janetsky

 

Trump pressure lights fire under Mexico’s ‘powder keg’ ruling party

08/17/25, Financial Times, Christine Murray

 

Battle-Tested Cop is Mexico’s Hope to Tame Cartels and Placate Trump

08/18/25, Bloomberg, Alex Vasquez

 

Six severed heads found on road in Mexico

08/19/25, BBC, Will Grant

 

Embroidery honors Mexico femicide victims: ‘The next name might be yours’

08/20/25, The Guardian, Oscar Lopez

 

‘Historic’: how Mexico’s welfare policies helped 13.4 million people out of poverty

08/18/25/, The Guardian, Oscar Lopez

 

In Texas cattle country, ranchers brace for flesh-eating screwworms

08/15/25, Reuters, Heather Schlitz, Cassandra Garrison and Elida Moreno

 

Mexican ranchers hit by flesh-eating screwworm want action on cattle smuggling

08/15/25, Reuters, Cassandra Garrison

 

Nubank Names New CEO for Mexico Ahead of Banking Push

08/20/25, Bloomberg, María Clara Cobo

 

Mexico Equity Markets Set for Revival in 2026, JPMorgan says

08/20/25, Bloomberg, Michael O’Boyle and Kelsey Butler

 

Rodrigo Moya, Who Photographed a Changing Latin America, Dies at 91

08/19/25, The New York Times, Miguel Salazar

 

Download PDF: MI-MxForeignPressChatter-082225