After Trump visit, Mexico's treasury chief quits

Mexico's Finance Secretary Luis Videgaray looks down as President Enrique Pena Nieto announces Videgaray's resignation at Los Pinos presidential residence in Mexico City, Wednesday, Sept. 7, 2016.
Mexico's Finance Secretary Luis Videgaray looks down as President Enrique Pena Nieto announces Videgaray's resignation at Los Pinos presidential residence in Mexico City, Wednesday, Sept. 7, 2016.

MEXICO CITY -- Treasury Minister Luis Videgaray has resigned, a ministry spokesman said Wednesday, the week after Donald Trump traveled to Mexico to meet with President Ernesto Pena Nieto.

Treasury Ministry spokesman Claudia Algorri said Videgaray presented his resignation to Pena Nieto on Wednesday.

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Algorri gave no reason for the resignation, but it came after Pena Nieto's meeting with the Republican presidential candidate in the Mexican capital last week.

The president's office announced earlier Wednesday that Pena Nieto would have a message later in the day about a change in his government.

Pena Nieto has faced criticism after Trump's brief visit, with many Mexicans complaining that the president was poorly advised by the people around him.

While some Mexican media outlets have said the visit was Videgaray's idea, Pena Nieto denied that in recent days and said the initiative was all his.

Pena Nieto also has been ridiculed for not confronting him more directly about comments calling migrants from Mexico criminals, drug-runners and "rapists," and Trump's vows to build a border wall and force Mexico to pay for it.

The wall proposal has been criticized widely and fiercely in Mexico.

Speaking at a town-hall meeting last week where he fielded questions from young people, Pena Nieto sought to defend his decision to invite Trump to visit.

He said the easier path would have been to "cross my arms" and do nothing in response to Trump's "affronts, insults and humiliations," but he believed it necessary to open a "space for dialogue" to stress the importance of the U.S.-Mexico relationship.

"What is a fact is that in the face of candidate Trump's postures and positions, which clearly represent a threat to the future of Mexico, it was necessary to talk," Pena Nieto said hours after his annual state-of-the-nation report was delivered to Congress.

He acknowledged Mexicans' "enormous indignation" over Trump's presence in the country and repeated that he told him in person Mexico would in no way pay for the proposed border wall.

Pena Nieto came under fire for not responding to Trump's mention of the wall during a joint news conference on Aug. 31, something he has since sought to correct.

A day later, Trump tweeted that Mexico would pay for the wall, Pena Nieto fired back his own tweet saying that would "never" happen.

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, also invited to visit by Pena Nieto, said this week that she won't be going to Mexico before Election Day. She called Trump's quick stop in Mexico City "an embarrassing international incident."

A Section on 09/08/2016

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