Clare Ribando Seelke
Specialist in Latin American Affairs
Congress has maintained significant interest in neighboring Mexico, a close
ally and
top trade
partner that shares
a nearly 2,000-mile border
with
the United States.
On December 1, 2012,
the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) retook the Mexican presidency after 12
years in opposition, leaving analysts wondering how differently PRI President Enrique
Peña
Nieto
will govern than
his PRI predecessors, who
ruled Mexico from 1929 to 2000. Supporters maintain that Peña Nieto
heads
a “new PRI”
government
that is free from the
corruption that characterized the
party in the past and is
enacting bold reforms
that proved elusive
for the last two National Action
Party (PAN) administrations.
Skeptics question how Peña
Nieto
will
remain independent from old-time PRI power brokers and how he will challenge PRI interest groups resistant to change.
President Peña Nieto
has announced a reformist
agenda with specific
proposals under five
pillars: reducing violence; combating poverty; boosting growth; reforming education; and fostering social responsibility.
He signed a “Pact for
Mexico”
with
the leaders of the PAN and leftist Party of the
Democratic Revolution (PRD)
that has paved the
way for the enactment of
education and telecommunications
reforms. The
Peña Nieto government
has
just introduced
an energy reform proposal that would
allow Petróleos
Mexicanos (PEMEX) to form profit-sharing partnerships with
private companies.
Fiscal reforms
to increase tax revenues are to follow.
Both proposals could
test the Pact’s ability to
prevent
legislative
gridlock.
U.S.-Mexican relations are evolving.
During his May 2013 visit to Mexico, President Obama
embraced President Peña
Nieto’s desire
to bolster economic ties
and focus on new issues,
including education.
U.S.-Mexican security cooperation
has continued; future efforts may
increasingly focus on crime prevention
and
judicial reform.
Bilateral cooperation may have
contributed to the July capture
of the leader of
Los Zetas. However, there has been friction caused by
limits Mexico
has placed on U.S. involvement
in law enforcement and
intelligence operations
and the recent release of a
drug kingpin imprisoned in Mexico for
killing a U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration agent.
If implemented, the Trans-boundary Hydrocarbons
Agreement signed in February 2012 on managing oil resources in the Gulf of Mexico could
create opportunities for
energy cooperation. The
Peña Nieto government has
supported efforts to enact
comprehensive
immigration
reform in the United
States, but
urged
U.S. policymakers
not to militarize the
U.S.-Mexico border.
Key Policy Issues: This
year,
immigration
and border security have been at the center of the congressional
agenda. The Senate
passed S. 744, a comprehensive
immigration
reform bill that includes additional funding for
border
security,
legalization for certain unauthorized immigrants, and changes to the temporary and permanent immigration systems. In
contrast, House committees have
taken up a series
of discrete immigration measures
(H.R. 1417, H.R. 1772, H.R.
2131, H.R. 1773, and H.R. 2278). The House passed legislation, H.R.
1613, which would provide for implementation
of the U.S.-Mexico Trans-boundary Hydrocarbons Agreement. The Senate
has
yet to consider related legislation
on the agreement (S. 812). U.S.-Mexican energy cooperation
and the prospects for
reforming PEMEX have generated congressional interest. Congress is
also
examining how Mexico’s
participation in the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations
may impact U.S.-Mexico economic relations under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Language included in the
House-passed version
of
the FY2013 farm bill,
H.R. 2642,
addresses an ongoing U.S.-Mexico
water dispute.
Date of Report: August 15, 2013
Number of Pages: 30
Order Number: R42917
Price: $29.95
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