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Enrique Peña Nieto

Enrique Peña Nieto OMRI CYC GCB (Spanish pronunciation: [enˈrike ˈpeɲa ˈnjeto] (listen); born 20 July 1966), commonly referred to by his initials EPN, is a Mexican politician who served as the 64th president of Mexico from 1 December 2012 to 30 November 2018. A member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), he previously served as Governor of the State of Mexico from 2005 to 2011, local deputy from 2003 to 2004, and Secretary of Administration from 2000 to 2002.

Enrique Peña Nieto
Official portrait, 2012
64th President of Mexico
In office
1 December 2012 – 30 November 2018
Preceded byFelipe Calderón
Succeeded byAndrés Manuel López Obrador
President pro tempore
of the Pacific Alliance
In office
20 June 2014 – 3 July 2015
Preceded byJuan Manuel Santos
Succeeded byOllanta Humala
Governor of the State of Mexico
In office
16 September 2005 – 16 September 2011
Preceded byArturo Montiel Rojas
Succeeded byEruviel Ávila Villegas
Local deputy of the
Congress of the State of Mexico
for the 13th local district
In office
5 September 2003 – 14 January 2005
Preceded byArturo Osornio Sánchez
Succeeded byJesús Alcántara Núñez
Secretary of Administration of the State of Mexico
In office
11 May 2000 – 4 December 2002
GovernorArturo Montiel Rojas
Preceded byErnesto Nemer Álvarez
Succeeded byLuis Miranda Nava
Personal details
Born (1966-07-20) 20 July 1966 (age 56)
Atlacomulco, State of Mexico, Mexico
Political partyInstitutional Revolutionary Party
Spouse(s)
Mónica Pretelini
(m. 1993; died 2007)

(m. 2010; div. 2019)
Children4
Parent(s)Gilberto Enrique Peña del Mazo
María Socorro Nieto Sánchez
EducationPanamerican University (BA)
Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education (MBA)
Signature

Born in Atlacomulco and raised in Toluca, Peña Nieto attended Panamerican University, graduating with a B.A. in legal studies. After attaining an MBA from ITESM, he began his political career by joining the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in 1984. After serving as a public notary in Mexico City, he began an ascent through local political ranks in the late 1990s, culminating in his 2005 campaign for Governor of the State of Mexico. As governor, he pledged to deliver 608 compromisos (commitments) to his constituency to varying levels of success. His tenure was marked by low-to-moderate approval of his handling of a rising murder rate, the San Salvador Atenco civil unrest, and various public health issues. He launched his 2012 presidential campaign on a platform of economic competitiveness and open government. After performing well in polls and a series of high-profile candidate withdrawals, Peña Nieto was elected president with 38.14% of the vote.

As president, he instated the multilateral Pact for Mexico, which soothed inter-party fighting and led to increased legislation across the political spectrum. During his first four years, Peña Nieto led an expansive breakup of monopolies, liberalized Mexico's energy sector, reformed public education, and modernized the country's financial regulation.[1] However, political gridlock and allegations of media bias gradually worsened corruption, crime, and drug trade in Mexico. Global drops in oil prices limited the success of his economic reforms, which lowered political support for Peña Nieto. His handling of the Iguala mass kidnapping in 2014 and the escape of drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán from Altiplano prison in 2015 sparked international criticism. Guzmán himself claims to have bribed Peña Nieto during his trial.[2] As of 2022, he is additionally part of the Odebrecht controversy, with former Pemex CEO Emilio Lozoya Austin declaring that Peña Nieto's presidential campaign benefited from illegal campaign funds provided by Odebrecht in exchange for future favors.[3][4][5]

Historical evaluations and approval rates of his presidency have been mostly negative. Detractors highlight a series of failed policies and a strained public presence while supporters note increased economic competitiveness and loosening of gridlock. He began his term with an approval rate of 50%, hovered around 35% during his inter-years and finally bottomed out at 12% in January 2017. He left office with an approval rating of only 18% and 77% of disapproval.[6][7] Peña Nieto is seen as one of the most controversial and least popular presidents in the history of Mexico.[8][9]

Early life and education

Enrique Peña Nieto was born on 20 July 1966 in Atlacomulco, State of Mexico, a city 55 miles (89 km) northwest of Mexico City.[10] He is the oldest of four siblings; his father, Gilberto Enrique Peña del Mazo, was an electrical engineer; his mother, María del Perpetuo Socorro Ofelia Nieto Sánchez, a schoolteacher.[10] He is the nephew of two former governors of the State of México: on his mother's side, Arturo Montiel; on his father's, Alfredo del Mazo González.[11][12] He attended Denis Hall School in Alfred, Maine, during one year of junior high school in 1979 to learn English.[10] After living in Atlacomulco for the first 11 years of his life, Peña Nieto's family moved to the city of Toluca.[13]

In 1975, his father would often take him to the campaign rallies of the State of Mexico's governor, Jorge Jiménez Cantú, a close friend of Peña del Mazo. The successor of the governor was Alfredo del Mazo González, a cousin of Peña Nieto's father. During Del Mazo González's campaign in 1981, the fifteen-year-old Peña Nieto had his first direct contact with Mexican politics: he began delivering campaign literature in favor of his relative, a memory Peña Nieto recalls as the turning point and start of his deep interest in politics.

In 1984 at the age of 18, Peña Nieto traveled to Mexico City and enrolled in the Panamerican University, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in legal studies.[14] Peña Nieto's academic thesis was found to contain some improper citations and plagiarism, which stirred controversy in May 2016.[15][16] Peña Nieto sought a master's degree in Business Administration (MBA) at the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey (ITESM),[17][18] based in the State of Mexico.

Political beginnings

 
Peña Nieto in 2013

Peña Nieto joined the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in 1984, and with a law degree nearly completed, he began earning his own money.[19] During his final years in college, Peña Nieto worked for a public notary in Mexico City, around the same time when his relative Alfredo del Mazo González was mentioned as a firm candidate for the 1988 presidential elections.[19] In his twenties, he worked at the San Luis Industrial Corporation, an auto parts manufacturer, and at the law firm Laffan, Muse and Kaye. While still a student at the Universidad Panamericana, he roomed with Eustaquio de Nicolás, the current president of Homex, a leading Mexican construction and real estate company. He also befriended and roomed with Luis Miranda, who occupied several offices during the 1999–2000 administration in the State of Mexico.[19]

Peña Nieto formally started his political career under the mentorship of Montiel Rojas, becoming the Secretary of the Citizen Movement of Zone I of the State Directive Committee of the National Confederation of Popular Organizations (CNOP), one of the three sectors of the PRI. For three consecutive years, Peña Nieto participated as a delegate to the Organization and Citizen Front in different municipalities of the State of Mexico. Then, between 1993 and 1998, during Emilio Chuayfett's term as governor, Peña Nieto was chief of staff and personal secretary to Montiel Rojas, the Secretary of Economic Development of the State of Mexico.[19]

After 1999, Peña Nieto went from having low-level secretary positions to higher and more qualified offices.[20] He served from 1999 to 2000 as the sub-secretary of government,[21] and as financial sub-coordinator of the political campaign of Montiel Rojas.[19] In 2001, Montiel Rojas named Peña Nieto Sub-secretary of Interior in the State of Mexico, a position that granted him the opportunity to meet and forge relationships with top PRI politicians and business leaders. After his term concluded, he served as the administrative secretary, as president of the Directive Council of Social Security, as president of the Internal Council of Health, and as vice president of the National System for Integral Family Development – all in the State of Mexico.[20] Under the wing of Montiel Rojas, Peña Nieto formed a group known as the "Golden Boys of Atlacomulco" with other members of the PRI.[22]

Campaign for Governor

Peña Nieto was elected to a local deputy position in his hometown of Atlacomulco, State of Mexico, in 2003.[23][24] Two years later, the governorship of the State of Mexico was sought by Atlacomulco-natives Carlos Hank Rhon, Isidro Pastor, Héctor Luna de la Vega, Guillermo González Martínez, Óscar Gustavo Cárdenas Monroy, Eduardo Bernal Martínez, Cuauhtémoc García Ortega and Fernando Alberto García Cuevas.[24] Peña Nieto was among the crowd, but was not poised as one of the favorites.[24] Nonetheless, in 2005, Peña Nieto was the last man standing, succeeding Montiel Rojas as governor of the State of Mexico.[25] On 12 February 2005, with 15,000 supporters in attendance, he was sworn in as candidate for the PRI.[26]

Governor of the State of Mexico (2005–2011)

 
Peña Nieto at the World Economic Forum (2010)

On 15 September 2005, Peña Nieto was sworn as governor of the State of Mexico at the Morelos theater in Toluca. Among the attendees were the outgoing governor, Arturo Montiel; the president of the Superior Court of Justice, José Castillo Ambriz; former governors, members of Peña Nieto's cabinet and party, mayors, businessmen, and church figures.[27] The centerpiece of Peña Nieto's governorship was his claim that he was to deliver his compromisos – 608 promises he signed in front of a notary to convince voters that he would deliver results and be an effective leader.[28] According to El Universal, during Peña Nieto's first year as governor, his administration delivered 10 of the structural promises he had advocated in his campaign – marking the lowest figure in his six-year term.[29]

By 2006, his administration carried out 141 of the promised projects, making that year the most active in the governor's term. The 608 projects Peña Nieto proposed consisted of creating highways, building hospitals, and creating adequate water systems to provide fresh water throughout the state. The most important of these was highway infrastructure, which tripled under Peña's government. By mid-2011, the official page of the State of Mexico noted that only two projects were left.[29] The major projects in public transportation were the Suburban Railway of the Valley of Mexico Metropolitan Area and the "Mexibús", both of which served commuters between Mexico City and the State of Mexico, providing service to more than 300,000 people every day and 100 million a year. Regarding public health services, 196 hospitals and medical centers were built throughout the state and the number of mobile units to attend remote and vulnerable areas doubled.[30] Deaths caused by respiratory diseases were reduced by 55%, while deaths caused by dysentery and cervical cancer were reduced by 68% and 25% respectively. In addition, between 2005 and 2011, the State of Mexico was able to fulfill the requirement of the World Health Organization of having one doctor for every 1,000 inhabitants. The funds for these and all the other commitments were obtained through restructuring the state's public debt, a strategy designed by his first Secretary of Finance, Luis Videgaray Caso. The restructuring also managed to keep the debt from increasing during Peña Nieto's term because the tax base was broadened to the point that it doubled in six years.[30]

Peña Nieto also claimed that he halved the murder rate in the State of Mexico during his time as governor,[31] but retracted this claim after The Economist showed that the murder rate did not diminish and was being measured in a different way.[32]

The Yo Soy 132 student movement criticized Peña Nieto for his stance on the San Salvador Atenco unrest, which occurred during his term as governor.[33] A report from the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) stated protestors were subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, arbitrary arrests and sexual assault, and remarked the excessive use of force by state and federal police.[34][35] Peña Nieto stated in an interview that he does not justify the actions of the state and municipal forces, but also mentioned that they were not gladly received by the citizens of San Salvador Atenco upon their arrival.[33][36]

Presidential campaign

 
Peña Nieto campaigning in 2012

On 23 November 2011, Peña Nieto went to a book fair in Casa del Lago, Mexico City. There he presented his book México, la gran esperanza (Mexico, the great hope). He was accompanied by writer Héctor Aguilar Camín, the former governor of Mexico's Central Bank, Guillermo Ortiz Martínez, and the journalist Jaime Sánchez Susarrey. In the book, Peña Nieto argued that Mexico needed to expand its economy to create more jobs, insisting that in the past the country has only created jobs in the informal sector.[37] Additionally, he argued that promoting Pemex (Mexico's state-owned oil company) to compete in the private sector would create more jobs, elevate productivity, and balance wealth distribution across Mexico. Peña Nieto dedicated the book to his wife Angélica Rivera and to governor Eruviel Ávila Villegas and his family.[37] Peña Nieto said that the return of the PRI marks a new era in Mexico, and that his book served as a starting point to take Mexico "to better horizons".[38]

On 27 November 2011, a few days after the book fair, Peña Nieto was the PRI's last standing nominee for the 2012 Mexican presidential elections. The former State of Mexico governor completed his nomination at an event that gathered sympathizers and politicians.[39] Six days earlier, the senator and preliminary candidate of the PRI, Manlio Fabio Beltrones, withdrew from the race and gave Peña Nieto a clear path towards the presidency.[40] During a book fair a month later, Peña Nieto's public image came into question after he struggled to answer a question that asked which three books had marked his life.[41] Later, Peña Nieto was interviewed by El País and admitted that he did not know the price of tortillas. When he was criticized as being out of touch, Peña Nieto insisted that he was not "the woman of the household" and thus would not know the price.[42]

His campaign was supported by the Commitment to Mexico alliance.[43]

Elections

 
Celebration of the electoral victory of Enrique Peña Nieto as president of the republic.

On 1 July 2012, Mexico's presidential election took place. In an initial, partial count issued that night, the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) announced that based on a fast vote counting, Peña Nieto was leading the election with 38% of the votes.[44] His nearest competitor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, was just 6 points behind him. The figures were meant to be a representative sample of the votes nationwide; but shortly after this announcement, Peña Nieto appeared on national television claiming victory. "This Sunday, Mexico won", he said. He then thanked his voters and promised to run a government "responsible and open to criticism." At the PRI headquarters in Mexico City, the victory party began.[44] With more than 97% of the votes counted on election day, the PRI had won with about 38% of the votes, 6.4 points above the leftist candidate López Obrador of the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), who refused to concede to the results and had threatened to challenge the outcome, criticizing the PRI for allegedly engaging in vote buying and receiving illegal campaign contributions.[45][46]

Presidency (2012–2018)

 
Lunch with heads of State México, D.F. 1 December 2012.

Peña Nieto was sworn in as President of Mexico on 1 December 2012 at the federal congress and later flew to a military parade to formally take control of the armed forces. During his inauguration speech at the National Palace, Peña Nieto proposed his agendas and reforms for the new administration. Before and after the inauguration, in an event that has been labeled by the media as the 1DMX,[47][48][49][50] protesters rioted outside of the National Palace and clashed with Federal Police forces, vandalizing hotel structures and setting fires in downtown Mexico City. More than 90 protesters were arrested and several were injured. Mayor Marcelo Ebrard blamed "anarchist groups" for the violence.[51][52] However, there is evidence that agents of provocation worked with the police, paid 300 Mexican pesos (about US$20) for their acts of vandalism, according to media reports.[53] Photos show protesters waiting in groups behind police lines prior to the violence.[54] Previous protests had been entirely peaceful, but on this occasion, in apparent response to violence, the police fired rubber bullets.[55] The day after his inauguration, Peña Nieto announced the Pact for Mexico, an agreement that he had struck with the leaders of the two other major parties at the time, Jesús Zambrano Grijalva of the Party of the Democratic Revolution and Gustavo Madero Muñoz of the National Action Party, about the government's goals for the next few years.[56] On 1 December 2018, Enrique Peña Nieto left office and was succeeded by Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

Economic policy

 
Peña Nieto and Takanobu Ito at the inauguration of the Honda plant in Celaya, Guanajuato on 21 February 2014.

The auto manufacturing industry expanded rapidly under Nieto's presidency. In 2014, more than US$10 billion was committed in investment in the sector. In conjunction with Kia Motors in August 2014, the president announced plans for Kia to build a US$1 billion factory in Nuevo León. At the time, Mercedes-Benz and Nissan were already building a US$1.4 billion plant near Puebla, while BMW was planning a US$1 billion assembly plant in San Luis Potosí. Audi began building a US$1.3 billion factory near Puebla in 2013.[57] As of December 2014, two years into Peña Nieto's term, total investment in the auto sector in Mexico had reached US$19 billion.[58] The Bajío Region has received the majority of this investment, and with its rapidly expanding aerospace industry has become the fastest-growing region in the country.[59] In February 2014, Time was met with controversy for the release of a cover featuring Enrique Peña Nieto with the caption "Saving Mexico" (written by Michael Crowley),[60] as the cover article's title inside the magazine.[61] The controversial article praised the president and his cabinet for reforms like opening oil fields for foreign investment for the first time in 75 years (a reform towards which Mexican citizens have shown mixed feelings), ending the Mexican drug wars (which was not completely accurate), and even going as far as saying "the opposition party blocked major reforms that were necessary", that "American leaders could learn a thing or two from their resurgent southern neighbor" and saying Mexicans citizens' "alarms were replaced with applause".[62]

According to the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS), between December 2012 and June 2016, more than two million jobs were created in Mexico. Of those jobs, 41% were taken by women and 36% were taken by individuals between 20 and 34 years of age. IMSS also revealed that 86% were long-term jobs and 14% were temporary. These jobs have led to a 26% increase in revenue accumulation for IMSS, an additional MXN$50 billion. More than half a million jobs had salaries worth five minimum wages (about MXN$10,000 per month) and there was a 22% increase in jobs with salaries greater than 20 minimum wages.[63]

Special economic zones

 
President Enrique Peña Nieto, President Donald Trump, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sign the USMCA agreement during the G20 summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on 30 November 2018.

At the end of May 2016, Peña Nieto signed a law that will create special economic zones in economically depressed southern states. The first three are: Lázaro Cárdenas, Michoacán; Port Chiapas, Chiapas; and in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec to better join the ports of Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz and Salina Cruz, Oaxaca. Another zone in the petroleum region of Tabasco and Campeche, hit by the downturn in the oil industry, is planned for 2017.[64]

The special economic zones are meant to alleviate the lack of industry in the South. During the signing, Peña Nieto highlighted the difference between the South and the industrial North and Center of Mexico: two of every three people in extreme poverty in Mexico live in the southern states.[citation needed] While the three poorest states (Chiapas, Oaxaca and Guerrero) have about 10% of the population, they only receive $1 of every $36 in foreign direct investment in the country. He went on to say that there are two Mexicos: one "that competes and wins in the global economy, with growing levels of income, development and well-being", while the other Mexico "has been left behind [and] hasn't been able to take advantage of its potential."[64]

The special economic zones will offer tax incentives (exemption from the 16% VAT),[65] trade and customs benefits and the streamlining of regulatory processes.[64] There will also be an increase in infrastructure spending in these regions. Private administrators will run the zones on 40-year contracts (managing infrastructure and attracting tenants).[65][needs update] According to Peña Nieto, at the latest, each of these zones will have an anchor tenant that will attract suppliers and other industries in the supply chain by 2018. The World Bank advised Mexico during the formulation of the special economic zones plan.[64]

Domestic policy

 
Funeral of Luis Nishizawa, President Enrique Peña Nieto (right) attended to pay respects to the painter.

Peña Nieto enacted a public education reform that aimed to curb the powerful teachers' union, Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (SNTE), improve standards, centralize the process for hiring, evaluating, promoting and retaining teachers, and crack down on corruption – such as wages for non-existent "ghost teachers".[66][67] Five years after its signing, the plan has barely affected standards: Mexico still ranks last in education among the 35 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries and the Secretariat of Public Education spent more money on communications (2,700% more on communications in 2017 than was budgeted) than on teacher training.[67]

Security policy

 
President Enrique Peña Nieto and Secretary of Foreign Affairs Claudia Ruiz Massieu visit the monument to the 201st Fighter Squadron in Manila, November 2015.

While campaigning, Peña Nieto appointed a former general of the National Police of Colombia as his external advisor for public security, and promised to reduce the murder rate in Mexico by 50% by the end of his six-year term.[68][69] Critics of Peña Nieto's security strategy, however, said that he offered "little sense" in exactly how he will reduce the violence.[70][68] During the three-month campaign, Peña Nieto was not explicit on his anti-crime strategy, and many analysts wondered whether he was holding back politically sensitive details or simply did not know how he would attempt to squelch the violence and carry out the next stage in Mexico's drug war.[68] United States officials were worried that the election of Peña Nieto's Institutional Revolutionary Party may mean a return to the old PRI tactics of "corruption [and] backroom deals" with the cartels in exchange for bribes and relative peace.[71][72]

 
President Enrique Peña Nieto, accompanied by Cabinet members, holds a press conference in the Palacio Nacional announcing the capture of Joaquín Guzmán.

In 2012, the president-elect emphasized that he did not support the involvement or presence of armed United States agents in Mexico, but considered allowing the United States to instruct Mexico's military training in counterinsurgency tactics. Beyond that, Peña Nieto promised that no other measures will be taken by the States in Mexico.[73]

The security policy of Peña Nieto prioritized the reduction of violence rather than attacking Mexico's drug-trafficking organizations head-on, marking a departure from the strategy of the previous six years during Felipe Calderón's administration. One of the biggest contrasts is the focus on lowering murder rates, kidnappings, and extortions, as opposed to arresting or killing the country's most-wanted drug lords and intercepting their shipments.[70]

On 13 December 2012, a law was approved that included far-reaching security reforms. Mexico's Interior Ministry, greatly strengthened by the bill, was made solely responsible for public security. Part of Peña Nieto's strategy consists of the creation of a national police of 40,000 members, known as a "gendarmerie". The Economist reported that the gendarmerie would have an initial strength of 10,000, but the Washington Office on Latin America reported that it was reduced to 5,000 members and would not be operational until July 2014.[74] The Interior Ministry announced that 15 specialized police units were being formed to exclusively focus on major crimes that include kidnapping and extortion, along with a new task force dedicated to tracking missing persons.[75] Peña Nieto also proposed centralizing the sub-federal police forces under one command.[70]

In December 2017, the Law of Internal Security [es] was passed by legislation but was met with criticism, especially from the National Human Rights Commission, accusing it gave the President a blank check.[76][77][78]

Energy policy

 
NAFTA leaders U.S. President Barack Obama, Mexican President Peña Nieto, and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, 2014.

During the presidential campaign, Peña Nieto promised to allow private investment in Pemex, Mexico's state-owned oil company. He also indicated interest in an economic agreement with Petrobras, Brazil's oil company.[79] By liberalizing Pemex, investors say Peña Nieto's proposal could allow joint ventures and private investment in the oil company.[80]

According to the Financial Times in 2012, Peña Nieto's PRI government, which held just over 38% of the votes in Congress, might have difficulty gaining a majority to pass such reforms, or the two-thirds majority needed to change the Mexican constitution.[80] Pemex was founded through the nationalization of foreign oil interests, and the Mexican constitution bans major outside investments.[81] Changing Pemex could transform the psychology of Mexico's business sector and involve cultural and political changes that cannot be rushed.[80][81] President Lázaro Cárdenas led the expropriation of foreign oil company assets in 1938 to form Pemex, which has served as a symbol of national identity.[82]

Eric Martin of Bloomberg News stated that if Peña Nieto wants to invite investment, he will have to face the challenges of union leaders and local officials who have benefited from the oil company's bonanza.[81] Productivity in Pemex has been declined in the 2000s.[82] Peña Nieto declared while campaigning that overhauling Pemex will be the PRI's and his "signature issue", and that he will encourage private companies to invest in exploration and development activities.[81] Following Peña Nieto's hike in the price of gasoline as a result of his privatization of the Mexican oil industry, protests erupted nation-wide. Protestors blockaded major highways, forced the closing of foreign borders and shut down gas stations.[83]

Foreign policy

2016 visit by Donald Trump

 
Peña Nieto meets with U.S. President Donald Trump at the G20 Hamburg summit, July 2017.
 
Peña Nieto at the Élysée Palace with French President Emmanuel Macron, 2017
 
Visit to Israel for the State Funeral of Shimon Peres

Peña Nieto invited U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump to visit on 31 August 2016, and appeared with him in a press conference. Peña Nieto was criticized for extending the invitation to Trump,[84] and following the conference, journalist Jorge Ramos criticized Peña Nieto for not using the opportunity to publicly contradict Trump's campaign promise to make Mexico pay for his proposed Mexico–United States border wall, as well as what Ramos called, Trump's "attacks on Latin American immigrants, his rejection of free trade agreements and his scorn for global organizations."[85] Despite this, Peña Nieto stated on his Twitter that he made it clear to Trump that Mexico would not pay for the wall,[86] only to shortly after get a reply from Donald Trump saying: "Mexico will pay for the wall!"[87][88]

Trump's presidency and border wall

Peña Nieto and Trump were to meet on 26 January 2017, until Trump wrote on his Twitter account: "If Mexico is unwilling to pay for the badly needed wall, then it would be better to cancel the upcoming meeting". This directly led Peña Nieto to cancel his visit to the U.S. president.[89][90] In an interview with Aristegui Noticias, Washington-based freelance journalist Dolia Estévez said she obtained access to part of a one-hour phone conversation between the two presidents the day of the scheduled meeting. She stated, "Trump humiliated Peña Nieto", and said that the conversation only lasted 20 minutes; she also explained that the speech was prolonged to an hour due to translation efforts because Peña Nieto does not understand English.[91][92][93] While many media outlets praised Peña Nieto for cancelling the visit with Trump, Forbes Mexico stated that despite showing support towards Peña Nieto for cancelling such event, "that shouldn't translate in forgiveness to what happens within our country [Mexico]" adding that "a state incapable of bringing credibility and stability could not grow", and that more than Trump, the thing keeping Mexico from prosperity was the corruption within the Mexican government.[94]

Controversies

Publicity and public image

As of July 2017, Oxford University's Computational Propaganda Research Project claimed Mexico's social media manipulation (Peñabots) to come directly from the Mexican government itself.[95][96]

A December 2017 article of The New York Times, reported Enrique Peña Nieto spending about 2 billion dollars on publicity, during his first five years as president, the largest publicity budget ever spent by a Mexican President.[97]

Iguala mass kidnapping

In September 2014, 43 male college students were forcibly taken then disappeared in Guerrero. The forced mass disappearance of the students arguably became the biggest political and public security scandal Peña Nieto had faced during his administration. It led to nationwide protests, particularly in the state of Guerrero and Mexico City, and international condemnation.[98]

Freedom of the press

During his tenure as president, Peña Nieto has been accused of failing to protect journalists, whose deaths have been speculated to be politically triggered by officials attempting to prevent coverage of scandals. On 29 April 2017, The New York Times published a news report titled "In Mexico, 'It's Easy to Kill a Journalist'", which covered the high rate of deaths and disappearances of journalists in Mexico and declared Mexico had become "one of the worst countries in the world to be a journalist today."[99]

In November 2014, an article was published by journalist Carmen Aristegui, indicating that a $7 million "White House" owned by Enrique Peña Nieto and his wife Angelica Rivera, in Lomas de Chapultepec was registered under the name of a company affiliated with a business group that had received government contracts to build a bullet train.[100] The revelation about the potential conflict of interest in the acquisition of the house aggravated discontent about the government. Rivera released a video in which she detailed her income as a former soap opera actress, stating that she was selling the house and that the property was not under her name because she had not made the full payment yet. She later deleted the video.[101] Shortly after revealing the Mexican White House incident, Carmen Aristegui was controversially fired from her radio show at MVS Communications. As noted by The New York Times, Aristegui being fired was a perceived as a censorship towards news journalism and freedom of speech.[102] Aristegui took it to trial and by June 2018, three years after MVS fired her, the jury determined that it was indeed unconstitutional and against the law, to fire her and indeed was an act of censorship towards the freedom of speech.[103][104] Peña Nieto's successor in the presidency of Mexico, Andres Manuel López Obrador, promised Aristegui would be free to return to radio if she wanted and that there would be no more unfair censorship towards the freedom of speech.[105]

On 19 June 2017, The New York Times, in conjunction with Carmen Aristegui and Televisa news reporter Carlos Loret de Mola, reported that the Mexican government had used the Pegasus spyware to surveil on targets such as reporters, human rights leaders and anti-corruption activists using text messages as lures. From 2011 to 2017, the Mexican government spent $80 million on spyware. Pegasus infiltrates a person's cell phone and reports on their messages, e-mails, contacts and calendars.[106][107]

In 2016, Aristegui revealed in a special report arguing that Enrique Peña Nieto had committed plagiarism on his law thesis, at least a third of it, with 197 out of 682 paragraphs being unsourced or wrongly sourced works.[108][109]

Allegations of corruption

 
The president of Mexico, Enrique Peña Nieto, visit Juchitán, after the 2017 Chiapas earthquake.

In October 2017, Santiago Nieto Castillo, the head of the Office for Election-related Crimes (FEPADE) was controversially removed from office, shortly after opening an investigation into illicit campaign money during the 2012 presidential campaign, received by Peña Nieto and would be president of Pemex, Emilio Lozoya Austin from the Brazilian conglomerate Odebrecht.[110] In December 2017, The New York Times published accusations that Peña Nieto's government was blocking investigations against public corruption, with a commissioner saying the government was preventing the establishment of an impartial leader in FEPADE.[111] 22 ex-governors, all members of the PRI, were investigated for corruption with five jailed.

In March 2018, during the campaign period for the 2018 presidential election, the Prosecutor General's Office (PGR) opened an investigation into the PAN's candidate, Ricardo Anaya, for money laundering. Santiago Nieto said that the accusations towards Anaya were minor in comparison to Odebrecht and Peña Nieto scandal, as well as the SEDESOL scandal (in which $435 million pesos were lost) or the corruption amongst governors from the PRI such as Javier Duarte and César Duarte Jáquez (both whom were later arrested).[112][113] Santiago Nieto further charged that the PGR and FEPADE were not being neutral and were instead being used as tool by Peña Nieto's government to tamper with the upcoming election, by investigating Anaya, a political opponent, and not Meade, a political ally.[114]

In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Santiago Nieto would later reveal that Peña Nieto's government tried to bribe him to keep him silent, which he refused, saying "Sorry, but I can't receive any money from Peña Nieto." He subsequently received threatening calls with the words "Death follows you" and "Words of advice: stay out of Trouble".[115]

Brazilian conglomerate Odebrecht, accused of corruption and bribes throughout Latin America,[116] is currently under investigation for allegedly overriding the Peña Nieto's presidential campaign with illegal campaign funds. In exchange for campaign funds, the Peña Nieto administration allegedly granted contracts to Odebrecht through state-owned Pemex.[117] An Odebrecht employee told a Brazilian court that he had been asked to pay a bribe to Lozoya, then head of Pemex.[118] In March 2018, PRI legislators voted to stop the investigation into Odebrecht, which drew criticism.[119] The investigation against Emilio Loyoza, then-head of Pemex, was also controversially ceased after a judge ordered it days later.[120]

While in office, Peña Nieto invoked two constitutional rights related to prosecution: amparo and fuero. Amparo gives anyone accused of a crime the right to know which crimes they are being accused of; it is mostly used by people expecting to go to trial, and is used to allow the prosecuted person to build a defense with the help of a lawyer.[121] Fuero protects political figures from prosecution committed during their time in office, in effect delaying any investigations against him until the end of their terms.[122] Peña Nieto is the first Mexican president to invoke either right.

In 2020, Lozoya was detained by the Mexican government. On his trial statements, he testified against Peña Nieto and Luis Videgaray (the former Minister of Finance during Peña's government). He detailed that following Peña's orders, he acted as the middle-man between Peña Nieto and Odebrecht, stating that Peña Nieto's presidential campaign benefited from illegal campaign funds provided by Odebrecht, in exchange for future favors. According to the triangulation investigations that proved Lozoya guilty, he received $10 million from Odebrecht. During his trial, Lozoya described the payments for facilitating the exchange as a middle-man.[3][4][5] Lozoya and Videgaray are featured prominently in spots from the 2012 presidential campaign.[123] Mexican journalist Carlos Loret de Mola described being contacted by Peña Nieto's state, and being told the former president described himself as "unaware of Lozoya's corruption". Loret de Mola also said Peña Nieto was already in contact with his successor, Andres Manuel López Obrador, to declare his version of the events. Loret de Mola said that Peña Nieto was "going to get lost within his own lies", during the trial.[124]

On November 12, 2020, the Attorney General's Office (FGR) officially accused Peña Nieto of being a "traitor to the country and of electoral fraud due to the Odebrecht scandal" along with Lozoya and Videgaray.[125][126]

During United States of America v. Joaquín Guzmán Loera, Guzmán's lawyer alleged that the Sinaloa drug cartel had paid "hundreds of millions of dollars" in bribes to Peña Nieto and his predecessor, Felipe Calderón; both presidents denied the claims, with Peña Nieto's spokesman calling the claims "completely false and defamatory".[127] Alex Cifuentes, who described himself as Guzmán's "right-hand man", later testified that Peña Nieto originally asked for $250 million before settling on $100 million.[2]

Allegations of crimes against humanity

In 2016, a report by the Open Justice Society Initiative claimed that there are "reasonable grounds" to believe that both the Mexican army and drug cartels had committed crimes against humanity during the Mexican Drug War. The report accused both Peña Nieto and his predecessor Felipe Calderón of "almost completely failing" to ensure accountability for the actions of the Mexican army, and of denying or minimizing the scale of the atrocities.[128] In June 2018, human rights organizations presented documents alleging slayings, tortures, rapes and forced disappearances to the International Criminal Court, and called on them to investigate.[129]

Public image

Media gaffes

 
Enrique Peña Nieto and Angélica Rivera in the 2012 Mexican Teleton

Peña Nieto has had occasional lapses in memory or gaffes during public events or interviews.[130] The most-noted incident occurred during the International Book Fair of Guadalajara on 3 December 2011.[131] On that day, during a question and answer session, he was asked by an audience member to name three books that had influenced him, being only able to correctly reference the Bible.[132][133] He then "rambled, tossing out confused title names, asking for help in recalling authors and sometimes mismatching" the two others.[134] Other incidents have involved him not being able to recall Benito Juárez's year of birth,[135] being unable to remember the acronym of the Federal Institute of Access to Information (IFAI),[136][137] changing the date of foundation of the state of Hidalgo,[138][139] mistaking the capital of the State of Veracruz,[140] mentioning the U.S. presidential candidate "La señora Hillary Trump" (Mrs. Hillary Trump),[141] among others,[142] of varying degree of substantiation or credibility. These have gone viral on social media, especially Twitter[143][144] and a website that counts the number of days since his last gaffe.[145]

Allegations of media bias

 
President Enrique Peña Nieto meets with former Cuban President Fidel Castro in La Habana
 
Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan in the gardens of Los Pinos during a visit in September 2014.

Televisa

Televisa, the largest conglomerate broadcasting in Mexico and other Spanish-speaking countries, was accused of tilting their coverage towards Peña Nieto ahead of the 1 July vote. Thousands of students protested of the perceived bias throughout Mexico City and other cities.[146][147][148]

On 7 June 2018, The Guardian's Jo Tuckman reported about dozens of computer files – forwarded to The Guardian by a source who worked with Televisa but has not been possible to confirm the authenticity of the documents – suggesting that Televisa sold favorable coverage to Peña Nieto when he was governor of the state of Mexico and developed a smear campaign against López Obrador ahead of his first bid for the presidency in 2006.[149] Televisa and the PRI suggested that the documents were false.[150]

Time magazine

On the 24 March 2014 issue of the newsweekly Time, Peña Nieto was on the front cover with the caption, "Saving Mexico".[60] The front cover was met with widespread disapproval of the Mexican public, prompting various spoofs on social media,[151][152] even prompting a petition to have him removed from the cover.

Evaluations as president and legacy

In August 2016, Peña Nieto's approval ratings dropped to 23 percent (74 percent said they disapproved of his performance), which newspaper Reforma revealed to be the lowest approval rating for a president since they began polling in 1995.[153] The approval decreased to 12% by 19 January 2017.[154]

The lack of popularity and credibility of Peña Nieto's government is perceived to have caused the PRI to suffer monumental defeat in the 2018 Mexican general election, where the party received the lowest vote percentage in their history. The party's presidential candidate, José Antonio Meade, did not win a majority in any of Mexico's 300 voting locations, while the PRI was also defeated in each of the nine gubernatorial elections. The presidency of Mexico went to Andres Manuel López Obrador, from MORENA.[155] The PRI also lost to MORENA in Atlacomulco, the hometown of Enrique Peña Nieto.[156][157]

In 2020, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Peña Nieto's successor, asked Mexicans if they would like to see former presidents face trial for allegations of corruption. According to a survey conducted by El Universal, 78% of Mexicans wanted the former presidents to face trial, with Peña Nieto the one they wanted to be incarcerated the most.[158][159][160]

In popular culture

The 2014 Mexican comedy and political satire movie The Perfect Dictatorship had a plot based on the real life perceived Televisa controversy, which consisted of Mexican citizens heavily perceiving the news media was unfairly favoring PRI candidate Enrique Peña Nieto during the 2012 presidential election in Mexico.[161]

Personal life

Family life

 
Peña Nieto with family in Atlacomulco on the 2012 election day.

In 1993, Peña Nieto married his first wife, Mónica Pretelini (1963–2007) and the couple had three children: Paulina, Alejandro and Nicole.[162][163] Peña Nieto had two children outside his first marriage; a son with Maritza Díaz Hernández, and another child, with an undisclosed woman, who died as an infant.[164] Pretelini died on 11 January 2007 as the result of an epileptic episode.[162][165] Pretelini played a supporting role during the campaign of Peña Nieto's governorship.[162] In 2008, Peña Nieto began a relationship with Televisa soap opera actress Angélica Rivera, whom he had hired to help publicize his political campaign for the State of Mexico. The couple married in November 2011.[166][167] After his tenure as president ended, Rivera announced their divorce on 8 February 2019.[168]

Peña Nieto is the cousin of Alfredo del Mazo Maza, the current governor of the State of Mexico, of which his grandfather, father, distant uncle Arturo Montiel, as well as Peña Nieto himself, have previously been governors.[169]

Ancestry

Honours

 
Pope Francis and President Enrique Peña Nieto, accompanied by First Lady Angélica Rivera, held a meeting in the premises of the Presidential hangar following the Pope's arrival in Mexico.

National honours

Foreign honours

 
Emir of Qatar in the Mexican Palacio Nacional

See also

References

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External links

Political offices
Preceded by Governor of the State of Mexico
2005–2011
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of Mexico
2012–2018
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Institutional Revolutionary Party nominee for President of Mexico
2012
Succeeded by

enrique, peña, nieto, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, peña, second, maternal, family, name, nieto, omri, spanish, pronunciation, enˈrike, ˈpeɲa, ˈnjeto, listen, born, july, 1966, commonly, referred, initials, mexican, politician, served, 64th, p. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Pena and the second or maternal family name is Nieto Enrique Pena Nieto OMRI CYC GCB Spanish pronunciation enˈrike ˈpeɲa ˈnjeto listen born 20 July 1966 commonly referred to by his initials EPN is a Mexican politician who served as the 64th president of Mexico from 1 December 2012 to 30 November 2018 A member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI he previously served as Governor of the State of Mexico from 2005 to 2011 local deputy from 2003 to 2004 and Secretary of Administration from 2000 to 2002 Enrique Pena NietoOfficial portrait 201264th President of MexicoIn office 1 December 2012 30 November 2018Preceded byFelipe CalderonSucceeded byAndres Manuel Lopez ObradorPresident pro temporeof the Pacific AllianceIn office 20 June 2014 3 July 2015Preceded byJuan Manuel SantosSucceeded byOllanta HumalaGovernor of the State of MexicoIn office 16 September 2005 16 September 2011Preceded byArturo Montiel RojasSucceeded byEruviel Avila VillegasLocal deputy of theCongress of the State of Mexico for the 13th local districtIn office 5 September 2003 14 January 2005Preceded byArturo Osornio SanchezSucceeded byJesus Alcantara NunezSecretary of Administration of the State of MexicoIn office 11 May 2000 4 December 2002GovernorArturo Montiel RojasPreceded byErnesto Nemer AlvarezSucceeded byLuis Miranda NavaPersonal detailsBorn 1966 07 20 20 July 1966 age 56 Atlacomulco State of Mexico MexicoPolitical partyInstitutional Revolutionary PartySpouse s Monica Pretelini m 1993 died 2007 wbr Angelica Rivera m 2010 div 2019 wbr Children4Parent s Gilberto Enrique Pena del MazoMaria Socorro Nieto SanchezEducationPanamerican University BA Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education MBA SignatureBorn in Atlacomulco and raised in Toluca Pena Nieto attended Panamerican University graduating with a B A in legal studies After attaining an MBA from ITESM he began his political career by joining the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI in 1984 After serving as a public notary in Mexico City he began an ascent through local political ranks in the late 1990s culminating in his 2005 campaign for Governor of the State of Mexico As governor he pledged to deliver 608 compromisos commitments to his constituency to varying levels of success His tenure was marked by low to moderate approval of his handling of a rising murder rate the San Salvador Atenco civil unrest and various public health issues He launched his 2012 presidential campaign on a platform of economic competitiveness and open government After performing well in polls and a series of high profile candidate withdrawals Pena Nieto was elected president with 38 14 of the vote As president he instated the multilateral Pact for Mexico which soothed inter party fighting and led to increased legislation across the political spectrum During his first four years Pena Nieto led an expansive breakup of monopolies liberalized Mexico s energy sector reformed public education and modernized the country s financial regulation 1 However political gridlock and allegations of media bias gradually worsened corruption crime and drug trade in Mexico Global drops in oil prices limited the success of his economic reforms which lowered political support for Pena Nieto His handling of the Iguala mass kidnapping in 2014 and the escape of drug lord Joaquin El Chapo Guzman from Altiplano prison in 2015 sparked international criticism Guzman himself claims to have bribed Pena Nieto during his trial 2 As of 2022 he is additionally part of the Odebrecht controversy with former Pemex CEO Emilio Lozoya Austin declaring that Pena Nieto s presidential campaign benefited from illegal campaign funds provided by Odebrecht in exchange for future favors 3 4 5 Historical evaluations and approval rates of his presidency have been mostly negative Detractors highlight a series of failed policies and a strained public presence while supporters note increased economic competitiveness and loosening of gridlock He began his term with an approval rate of 50 hovered around 35 during his inter years and finally bottomed out at 12 in January 2017 He left office with an approval rating of only 18 and 77 of disapproval 6 7 Pena Nieto is seen as one of the most controversial and least popular presidents in the history of Mexico 8 9 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Political beginnings 2 1 Campaign for Governor 3 Governor of the State of Mexico 2005 2011 4 Presidential campaign 4 1 Elections 5 Presidency 2012 2018 5 1 Economic policy 5 1 1 Special economic zones 5 2 Domestic policy 5 3 Security policy 5 4 Energy policy 5 5 Foreign policy 5 5 1 2016 visit by Donald Trump 5 5 2 Trump s presidency and border wall 5 6 Controversies 5 6 1 Publicity and public image 5 6 2 Iguala mass kidnapping 5 6 3 Freedom of the press 5 6 4 Allegations of corruption 5 6 5 Allegations of crimes against humanity 6 Public image 6 1 Media gaffes 6 2 Allegations of media bias 6 3 Evaluations as president and legacy 6 4 In popular culture 7 Personal life 7 1 Family life 7 2 Ancestry 8 Honours 8 1 National honours 8 2 Foreign honours 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and education EditEnrique Pena Nieto was born on 20 July 1966 in Atlacomulco State of Mexico a city 55 miles 89 km northwest of Mexico City 10 He is the oldest of four siblings his father Gilberto Enrique Pena del Mazo was an electrical engineer his mother Maria del Perpetuo Socorro Ofelia Nieto Sanchez a schoolteacher 10 He is the nephew of two former governors of the State of Mexico on his mother s side Arturo Montiel on his father s Alfredo del Mazo Gonzalez 11 12 He attended Denis Hall School in Alfred Maine during one year of junior high school in 1979 to learn English 10 After living in Atlacomulco for the first 11 years of his life Pena Nieto s family moved to the city of Toluca 13 In 1975 his father would often take him to the campaign rallies of the State of Mexico s governor Jorge Jimenez Cantu a close friend of Pena del Mazo The successor of the governor was Alfredo del Mazo Gonzalez a cousin of Pena Nieto s father During Del Mazo Gonzalez s campaign in 1981 the fifteen year old Pena Nieto had his first direct contact with Mexican politics he began delivering campaign literature in favor of his relative a memory Pena Nieto recalls as the turning point and start of his deep interest in politics In 1984 at the age of 18 Pena Nieto traveled to Mexico City and enrolled in the Panamerican University where he earned a Bachelor of Arts BA degree in legal studies 14 Pena Nieto s academic thesis was found to contain some improper citations and plagiarism which stirred controversy in May 2016 15 16 Pena Nieto sought a master s degree in Business Administration MBA at the Instituto Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey ITESM 17 18 based in the State of Mexico Political beginnings Edit Pena Nieto in 2013 Pena Nieto joined the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI in 1984 and with a law degree nearly completed he began earning his own money 19 During his final years in college Pena Nieto worked for a public notary in Mexico City around the same time when his relative Alfredo del Mazo Gonzalez was mentioned as a firm candidate for the 1988 presidential elections 19 In his twenties he worked at the San Luis Industrial Corporation an auto parts manufacturer and at the law firm Laffan Muse and Kaye While still a student at the Universidad Panamericana he roomed with Eustaquio de Nicolas the current president of Homex a leading Mexican construction and real estate company He also befriended and roomed with Luis Miranda who occupied several offices during the 1999 2000 administration in the State of Mexico 19 Pena Nieto formally started his political career under the mentorship of Montiel Rojas becoming the Secretary of the Citizen Movement of Zone I of the State Directive Committee of the National Confederation of Popular Organizations CNOP one of the three sectors of the PRI For three consecutive years Pena Nieto participated as a delegate to the Organization and Citizen Front in different municipalities of the State of Mexico Then between 1993 and 1998 during Emilio Chuayfett s term as governor Pena Nieto was chief of staff and personal secretary to Montiel Rojas the Secretary of Economic Development of the State of Mexico 19 After 1999 Pena Nieto went from having low level secretary positions to higher and more qualified offices 20 He served from 1999 to 2000 as the sub secretary of government 21 and as financial sub coordinator of the political campaign of Montiel Rojas 19 In 2001 Montiel Rojas named Pena Nieto Sub secretary of Interior in the State of Mexico a position that granted him the opportunity to meet and forge relationships with top PRI politicians and business leaders After his term concluded he served as the administrative secretary as president of the Directive Council of Social Security as president of the Internal Council of Health and as vice president of the National System for Integral Family Development all in the State of Mexico 20 Under the wing of Montiel Rojas Pena Nieto formed a group known as the Golden Boys of Atlacomulco with other members of the PRI 22 Campaign for Governor Edit Pena Nieto was elected to a local deputy position in his hometown of Atlacomulco State of Mexico in 2003 23 24 Two years later the governorship of the State of Mexico was sought by Atlacomulco natives Carlos Hank Rhon Isidro Pastor Hector Luna de la Vega Guillermo Gonzalez Martinez oscar Gustavo Cardenas Monroy Eduardo Bernal Martinez Cuauhtemoc Garcia Ortega and Fernando Alberto Garcia Cuevas 24 Pena Nieto was among the crowd but was not poised as one of the favorites 24 Nonetheless in 2005 Pena Nieto was the last man standing succeeding Montiel Rojas as governor of the State of Mexico 25 On 12 February 2005 with 15 000 supporters in attendance he was sworn in as candidate for the PRI 26 Governor of the State of Mexico 2005 2011 EditSee also Yo Soy 132 Pena Nieto at the World Economic Forum 2010 On 15 September 2005 Pena Nieto was sworn as governor of the State of Mexico at the Morelos theater in Toluca Among the attendees were the outgoing governor Arturo Montiel the president of the Superior Court of Justice Jose Castillo Ambriz former governors members of Pena Nieto s cabinet and party mayors businessmen and church figures 27 The centerpiece of Pena Nieto s governorship was his claim that he was to deliver his compromisos 608 promises he signed in front of a notary to convince voters that he would deliver results and be an effective leader 28 According to El Universal during Pena Nieto s first year as governor his administration delivered 10 of the structural promises he had advocated in his campaign marking the lowest figure in his six year term 29 By 2006 his administration carried out 141 of the promised projects making that year the most active in the governor s term The 608 projects Pena Nieto proposed consisted of creating highways building hospitals and creating adequate water systems to provide fresh water throughout the state The most important of these was highway infrastructure which tripled under Pena s government By mid 2011 the official page of the State of Mexico noted that only two projects were left 29 The major projects in public transportation were the Suburban Railway of the Valley of Mexico Metropolitan Area and the Mexibus both of which served commuters between Mexico City and the State of Mexico providing service to more than 300 000 people every day and 100 million a year Regarding public health services 196 hospitals and medical centers were built throughout the state and the number of mobile units to attend remote and vulnerable areas doubled 30 Deaths caused by respiratory diseases were reduced by 55 while deaths caused by dysentery and cervical cancer were reduced by 68 and 25 respectively In addition between 2005 and 2011 the State of Mexico was able to fulfill the requirement of the World Health Organization of having one doctor for every 1 000 inhabitants The funds for these and all the other commitments were obtained through restructuring the state s public debt a strategy designed by his first Secretary of Finance Luis Videgaray Caso The restructuring also managed to keep the debt from increasing during Pena Nieto s term because the tax base was broadened to the point that it doubled in six years 30 Pena Nieto also claimed that he halved the murder rate in the State of Mexico during his time as governor 31 but retracted this claim after The Economist showed that the murder rate did not diminish and was being measured in a different way 32 The Yo Soy 132 student movement criticized Pena Nieto for his stance on the San Salvador Atenco unrest which occurred during his term as governor 33 A report from the National Human Rights Commission CNDH stated protestors were subjected to cruel inhuman or degrading treatment arbitrary arrests and sexual assault and remarked the excessive use of force by state and federal police 34 35 Pena Nieto stated in an interview that he does not justify the actions of the state and municipal forces but also mentioned that they were not gladly received by the citizens of San Salvador Atenco upon their arrival 33 36 Presidential campaign Edit Pena Nieto campaigning in 2012 On 23 November 2011 Pena Nieto went to a book fair in Casa del Lago Mexico City There he presented his book Mexico la gran esperanza Mexico the great hope He was accompanied by writer Hector Aguilar Camin the former governor of Mexico s Central Bank Guillermo Ortiz Martinez and the journalist Jaime Sanchez Susarrey In the book Pena Nieto argued that Mexico needed to expand its economy to create more jobs insisting that in the past the country has only created jobs in the informal sector 37 Additionally he argued that promoting Pemex Mexico s state owned oil company to compete in the private sector would create more jobs elevate productivity and balance wealth distribution across Mexico Pena Nieto dedicated the book to his wife Angelica Rivera and to governor Eruviel Avila Villegas and his family 37 Pena Nieto said that the return of the PRI marks a new era in Mexico and that his book served as a starting point to take Mexico to better horizons 38 On 27 November 2011 a few days after the book fair Pena Nieto was the PRI s last standing nominee for the 2012 Mexican presidential elections The former State of Mexico governor completed his nomination at an event that gathered sympathizers and politicians 39 Six days earlier the senator and preliminary candidate of the PRI Manlio Fabio Beltrones withdrew from the race and gave Pena Nieto a clear path towards the presidency 40 During a book fair a month later Pena Nieto s public image came into question after he struggled to answer a question that asked which three books had marked his life 41 Later Pena Nieto was interviewed by El Pais and admitted that he did not know the price of tortillas When he was criticized as being out of touch Pena Nieto insisted that he was not the woman of the household and thus would not know the price 42 His campaign was supported by the Commitment to Mexico alliance 43 Elections Edit Celebration of the electoral victory of Enrique Pena Nieto as president of the republic See also 2012 Mexican general election On 1 July 2012 Mexico s presidential election took place In an initial partial count issued that night the Federal Electoral Institute IFE announced that based on a fast vote counting Pena Nieto was leading the election with 38 of the votes 44 His nearest competitor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador was just 6 points behind him The figures were meant to be a representative sample of the votes nationwide but shortly after this announcement Pena Nieto appeared on national television claiming victory This Sunday Mexico won he said He then thanked his voters and promised to run a government responsible and open to criticism At the PRI headquarters in Mexico City the victory party began 44 With more than 97 of the votes counted on election day the PRI had won with about 38 of the votes 6 4 points above the leftist candidate Lopez Obrador of the Party of the Democratic Revolution PRD who refused to concede to the results and had threatened to challenge the outcome criticizing the PRI for allegedly engaging in vote buying and receiving illegal campaign contributions 45 46 Presidency 2012 2018 Edit Lunch with heads of State Mexico D F 1 December 2012 Pena Nieto was sworn in as President of Mexico on 1 December 2012 at the federal congress and later flew to a military parade to formally take control of the armed forces During his inauguration speech at the National Palace Pena Nieto proposed his agendas and reforms for the new administration Before and after the inauguration in an event that has been labeled by the media as the 1DMX 47 48 49 50 protesters rioted outside of the National Palace and clashed with Federal Police forces vandalizing hotel structures and setting fires in downtown Mexico City More than 90 protesters were arrested and several were injured Mayor Marcelo Ebrard blamed anarchist groups for the violence 51 52 However there is evidence that agents of provocation worked with the police paid 300 Mexican pesos about US 20 for their acts of vandalism according to media reports 53 Photos show protesters waiting in groups behind police lines prior to the violence 54 Previous protests had been entirely peaceful but on this occasion in apparent response to violence the police fired rubber bullets 55 The day after his inauguration Pena Nieto announced the Pact for Mexico an agreement that he had struck with the leaders of the two other major parties at the time Jesus Zambrano Grijalva of the Party of the Democratic Revolution and Gustavo Madero Munoz of the National Action Party about the government s goals for the next few years 56 On 1 December 2018 Enrique Pena Nieto left office and was succeeded by Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador Economic policy Edit Pena Nieto and Takanobu Ito at the inauguration of the Honda plant in Celaya Guanajuato on 21 February 2014 The auto manufacturing industry expanded rapidly under Nieto s presidency In 2014 more than US 10 billion was committed in investment in the sector In conjunction with Kia Motors in August 2014 the president announced plans for Kia to build a US 1 billion factory in Nuevo Leon At the time Mercedes Benz and Nissan were already building a US 1 4 billion plant near Puebla while BMW was planning a US 1 billion assembly plant in San Luis Potosi Audi began building a US 1 3 billion factory near Puebla in 2013 57 As of December 2014 two years into Pena Nieto s term total investment in the auto sector in Mexico had reached US 19 billion 58 The Bajio Region has received the majority of this investment and with its rapidly expanding aerospace industry has become the fastest growing region in the country 59 In February 2014 Time was met with controversy for the release of a cover featuring Enrique Pena Nieto with the caption Saving Mexico written by Michael Crowley 60 as the cover article s title inside the magazine 61 The controversial article praised the president and his cabinet for reforms like opening oil fields for foreign investment for the first time in 75 years a reform towards which Mexican citizens have shown mixed feelings ending the Mexican drug wars which was not completely accurate and even going as far as saying the opposition party blocked major reforms that were necessary that American leaders could learn a thing or two from their resurgent southern neighbor and saying Mexicans citizens alarms were replaced with applause 62 According to the Mexican Social Security Institute IMSS between December 2012 and June 2016 more than two million jobs were created in Mexico Of those jobs 41 were taken by women and 36 were taken by individuals between 20 and 34 years of age IMSS also revealed that 86 were long term jobs and 14 were temporary These jobs have led to a 26 increase in revenue accumulation for IMSS an additional MXN 50 billion More than half a million jobs had salaries worth five minimum wages about MXN 10 000 per month and there was a 22 increase in jobs with salaries greater than 20 minimum wages 63 Special economic zones Edit President Enrique Pena Nieto President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sign the USMCA agreement during the G20 summit in Buenos Aires Argentina on 30 November 2018 At the end of May 2016 Pena Nieto signed a law that will create special economic zones in economically depressed southern states The first three are Lazaro Cardenas Michoacan Port Chiapas Chiapas and in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec to better join the ports of Coatzacoalcos Veracruz and Salina Cruz Oaxaca Another zone in the petroleum region of Tabasco and Campeche hit by the downturn in the oil industry is planned for 2017 64 The special economic zones are meant to alleviate the lack of industry in the South During the signing Pena Nieto highlighted the difference between the South and the industrial North and Center of Mexico two of every three people in extreme poverty in Mexico live in the southern states citation needed While the three poorest states Chiapas Oaxaca and Guerrero have about 10 of the population they only receive 1 of every 36 in foreign direct investment in the country He went on to say that there are two Mexicos one that competes and wins in the global economy with growing levels of income development and well being while the other Mexico has been left behind and hasn t been able to take advantage of its potential 64 The special economic zones will offer tax incentives exemption from the 16 VAT 65 trade and customs benefits and the streamlining of regulatory processes 64 There will also be an increase in infrastructure spending in these regions Private administrators will run the zones on 40 year contracts managing infrastructure and attracting tenants 65 needs update According to Pena Nieto at the latest each of these zones will have an anchor tenant that will attract suppliers and other industries in the supply chain by 2018 The World Bank advised Mexico during the formulation of the special economic zones plan 64 Domestic policy Edit Funeral of Luis Nishizawa President Enrique Pena Nieto right attended to pay respects to the painter Pena Nieto enacted a public education reform that aimed to curb the powerful teachers union Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educacion SNTE improve standards centralize the process for hiring evaluating promoting and retaining teachers and crack down on corruption such as wages for non existent ghost teachers 66 67 Five years after its signing the plan has barely affected standards Mexico still ranks last in education among the 35 Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development countries and the Secretariat of Public Education spent more money on communications 2 700 more on communications in 2017 than was budgeted than on teacher training 67 Security policy Edit Main article Security policy of the Enrique Pena Nieto administration President Enrique Pena Nieto and Secretary of Foreign Affairs Claudia Ruiz Massieu visit the monument to the 201st Fighter Squadron in Manila November 2015 While campaigning Pena Nieto appointed a former general of the National Police of Colombia as his external advisor for public security and promised to reduce the murder rate in Mexico by 50 by the end of his six year term 68 69 Critics of Pena Nieto s security strategy however said that he offered little sense in exactly how he will reduce the violence 70 68 During the three month campaign Pena Nieto was not explicit on his anti crime strategy and many analysts wondered whether he was holding back politically sensitive details or simply did not know how he would attempt to squelch the violence and carry out the next stage in Mexico s drug war 68 United States officials were worried that the election of Pena Nieto s Institutional Revolutionary Party may mean a return to the old PRI tactics of corruption and backroom deals with the cartels in exchange for bribes and relative peace 71 72 President Enrique Pena Nieto accompanied by Cabinet members holds a press conference in the Palacio Nacional announcing the capture of Joaquin Guzman In 2012 the president elect emphasized that he did not support the involvement or presence of armed United States agents in Mexico but considered allowing the United States to instruct Mexico s military training in counterinsurgency tactics Beyond that Pena Nieto promised that no other measures will be taken by the States in Mexico 73 The security policy of Pena Nieto prioritized the reduction of violence rather than attacking Mexico s drug trafficking organizations head on marking a departure from the strategy of the previous six years during Felipe Calderon s administration One of the biggest contrasts is the focus on lowering murder rates kidnappings and extortions as opposed to arresting or killing the country s most wanted drug lords and intercepting their shipments 70 On 13 December 2012 a law was approved that included far reaching security reforms Mexico s Interior Ministry greatly strengthened by the bill was made solely responsible for public security Part of Pena Nieto s strategy consists of the creation of a national police of 40 000 members known as a gendarmerie The Economist reported that the gendarmerie would have an initial strength of 10 000 but the Washington Office on Latin America reported that it was reduced to 5 000 members and would not be operational until July 2014 74 The Interior Ministry announced that 15 specialized police units were being formed to exclusively focus on major crimes that include kidnapping and extortion along with a new task force dedicated to tracking missing persons 75 Pena Nieto also proposed centralizing the sub federal police forces under one command 70 In December 2017 the Law of Internal Security es was passed by legislation but was met with criticism especially from the National Human Rights Commission accusing it gave the President a blank check 76 77 78 Energy policy Edit NAFTA leaders U S President Barack Obama Mexican President Pena Nieto and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper 2014 During the presidential campaign Pena Nieto promised to allow private investment in Pemex Mexico s state owned oil company He also indicated interest in an economic agreement with Petrobras Brazil s oil company 79 By liberalizing Pemex investors say Pena Nieto s proposal could allow joint ventures and private investment in the oil company 80 According to the Financial Times in 2012 Pena Nieto s PRI government which held just over 38 of the votes in Congress might have difficulty gaining a majority to pass such reforms or the two thirds majority needed to change the Mexican constitution 80 Pemex was founded through the nationalization of foreign oil interests and the Mexican constitution bans major outside investments 81 Changing Pemex could transform the psychology of Mexico s business sector and involve cultural and political changes that cannot be rushed 80 81 President Lazaro Cardenas led the expropriation of foreign oil company assets in 1938 to form Pemex which has served as a symbol of national identity 82 Eric Martin of Bloomberg News stated that if Pena Nieto wants to invite investment he will have to face the challenges of union leaders and local officials who have benefited from the oil company s bonanza 81 Productivity in Pemex has been declined in the 2000s 82 Pena Nieto declared while campaigning that overhauling Pemex will be the PRI s and his signature issue and that he will encourage private companies to invest in exploration and development activities 81 Following Pena Nieto s hike in the price of gasoline as a result of his privatization of the Mexican oil industry protests erupted nation wide Protestors blockaded major highways forced the closing of foreign borders and shut down gas stations 83 Foreign policy Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2018 2016 visit by Donald Trump Edit See also Donald Trump presidential campaign 2016 and Mexico United States barrier Pena Nieto meets with U S President Donald Trump at the G20 Hamburg summit July 2017 Pena Nieto at the Elysee Palace with French President Emmanuel Macron 2017 Visit to Israel for the State Funeral of Shimon Peres Pena Nieto invited U S Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump to visit on 31 August 2016 and appeared with him in a press conference Pena Nieto was criticized for extending the invitation to Trump 84 and following the conference journalist Jorge Ramos criticized Pena Nieto for not using the opportunity to publicly contradict Trump s campaign promise to make Mexico pay for his proposed Mexico United States border wall as well as what Ramos called Trump s attacks on Latin American immigrants his rejection of free trade agreements and his scorn for global organizations 85 Despite this Pena Nieto stated on his Twitter that he made it clear to Trump that Mexico would not pay for the wall 86 only to shortly after get a reply from Donald Trump saying Mexico will pay for the wall 87 88 Trump s presidency and border wall Edit See also 2017 Mexico United States diplomatic crisis Pena Nieto and Trump were to meet on 26 January 2017 until Trump wrote on his Twitter account If Mexico is unwilling to pay for the badly needed wall then it would be better to cancel the upcoming meeting This directly led Pena Nieto to cancel his visit to the U S president 89 90 In an interview with Aristegui Noticias Washington based freelance journalist Dolia Estevez said she obtained access to part of a one hour phone conversation between the two presidents the day of the scheduled meeting She stated Trump humiliated Pena Nieto and said that the conversation only lasted 20 minutes she also explained that the speech was prolonged to an hour due to translation efforts because Pena Nieto does not understand English 91 92 93 While many media outlets praised Pena Nieto for cancelling the visit with Trump Forbes Mexico stated that despite showing support towards Pena Nieto for cancelling such event that shouldn t translate in forgiveness to what happens within our country Mexico adding that a state incapable of bringing credibility and stability could not grow and that more than Trump the thing keeping Mexico from prosperity was the corruption within the Mexican government 94 Controversies Edit Publicity and public image Edit Main article Penabot See also Yo Soy 132 As of July 2017 Oxford University s Computational Propaganda Research Project claimed Mexico s social media manipulation Penabots to come directly from the Mexican government itself 95 96 A December 2017 article of The New York Times reported Enrique Pena Nieto spending about 2 billion dollars on publicity during his first five years as president the largest publicity budget ever spent by a Mexican President 97 Iguala mass kidnapping Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2020 See also 2014 Iguala mass kidnapping In September 2014 43 male college students were forcibly taken then disappeared in Guerrero The forced mass disappearance of the students arguably became the biggest political and public security scandal Pena Nieto had faced during his administration It led to nationwide protests particularly in the state of Guerrero and Mexico City and international condemnation 98 Freedom of the press Edit During his tenure as president Pena Nieto has been accused of failing to protect journalists whose deaths have been speculated to be politically triggered by officials attempting to prevent coverage of scandals On 29 April 2017 The New York Times published a news report titled In Mexico It s Easy to Kill a Journalist which covered the high rate of deaths and disappearances of journalists in Mexico and declared Mexico had become one of the worst countries in the world to be a journalist today 99 In November 2014 an article was published by journalist Carmen Aristegui indicating that a 7 million White House owned by Enrique Pena Nieto and his wife Angelica Rivera in Lomas de Chapultepec was registered under the name of a company affiliated with a business group that had received government contracts to build a bullet train 100 The revelation about the potential conflict of interest in the acquisition of the house aggravated discontent about the government Rivera released a video in which she detailed her income as a former soap opera actress stating that she was selling the house and that the property was not under her name because she had not made the full payment yet She later deleted the video 101 Shortly after revealing the Mexican White House incident Carmen Aristegui was controversially fired from her radio show at MVS Communications As noted by The New York Times Aristegui being fired was a perceived as a censorship towards news journalism and freedom of speech 102 Aristegui took it to trial and by June 2018 three years after MVS fired her the jury determined that it was indeed unconstitutional and against the law to fire her and indeed was an act of censorship towards the freedom of speech 103 104 Pena Nieto s successor in the presidency of Mexico Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador promised Aristegui would be free to return to radio if she wanted and that there would be no more unfair censorship towards the freedom of speech 105 On 19 June 2017 The New York Times in conjunction with Carmen Aristegui and Televisa news reporter Carlos Loret de Mola reported that the Mexican government had used the Pegasus spyware to surveil on targets such as reporters human rights leaders and anti corruption activists using text messages as lures From 2011 to 2017 the Mexican government spent 80 million on spyware Pegasus infiltrates a person s cell phone and reports on their messages e mails contacts and calendars 106 107 In 2016 Aristegui revealed in a special report arguing that Enrique Pena Nieto had committed plagiarism on his law thesis at least a third of it with 197 out of 682 paragraphs being unsourced or wrongly sourced works 108 109 Allegations of corruption Edit The president of Mexico Enrique Pena Nieto visit Juchitan after the 2017 Chiapas earthquake In October 2017 Santiago Nieto Castillo the head of the Office for Election related Crimes FEPADE was controversially removed from office shortly after opening an investigation into illicit campaign money during the 2012 presidential campaign received by Pena Nieto and would be president of Pemex Emilio Lozoya Austin from the Brazilian conglomerate Odebrecht 110 In December 2017 The New York Times published accusations that Pena Nieto s government was blocking investigations against public corruption with a commissioner saying the government was preventing the establishment of an impartial leader in FEPADE 111 22 ex governors all members of the PRI were investigated for corruption with five jailed In March 2018 during the campaign period for the 2018 presidential election the Prosecutor General s Office PGR opened an investigation into the PAN s candidate Ricardo Anaya for money laundering Santiago Nieto said that the accusations towards Anaya were minor in comparison to Odebrecht and Pena Nieto scandal as well as the SEDESOL scandal in which 435 million pesos were lost or the corruption amongst governors from the PRI such as Javier Duarte and Cesar Duarte Jaquez both whom were later arrested 112 113 Santiago Nieto further charged that the PGR and FEPADE were not being neutral and were instead being used as tool by Pena Nieto s government to tamper with the upcoming election by investigating Anaya a political opponent and not Meade a political ally 114 In an interview with The Wall Street Journal Santiago Nieto would later reveal that Pena Nieto s government tried to bribe him to keep him silent which he refused saying Sorry but I can t receive any money from Pena Nieto He subsequently received threatening calls with the words Death follows you and Words of advice stay out of Trouble 115 Brazilian conglomerate Odebrecht accused of corruption and bribes throughout Latin America 116 is currently under investigation for allegedly overriding the Pena Nieto s presidential campaign with illegal campaign funds In exchange for campaign funds the Pena Nieto administration allegedly granted contracts to Odebrecht through state owned Pemex 117 An Odebrecht employee told a Brazilian court that he had been asked to pay a bribe to Lozoya then head of Pemex 118 In March 2018 PRI legislators voted to stop the investigation into Odebrecht which drew criticism 119 The investigation against Emilio Loyoza then head of Pemex was also controversially ceased after a judge ordered it days later 120 While in office Pena Nieto invoked two constitutional rights related to prosecution amparo and fuero Amparo gives anyone accused of a crime the right to know which crimes they are being accused of it is mostly used by people expecting to go to trial and is used to allow the prosecuted person to build a defense with the help of a lawyer 121 Fuero protects political figures from prosecution committed during their time in office in effect delaying any investigations against him until the end of their terms 122 Pena Nieto is the first Mexican president to invoke either right In 2020 Lozoya was detained by the Mexican government On his trial statements he testified against Pena Nieto and Luis Videgaray the former Minister of Finance during Pena s government He detailed that following Pena s orders he acted as the middle man between Pena Nieto and Odebrecht stating that Pena Nieto s presidential campaign benefited from illegal campaign funds provided by Odebrecht in exchange for future favors According to the triangulation investigations that proved Lozoya guilty he received 10 million from Odebrecht During his trial Lozoya described the payments for facilitating the exchange as a middle man 3 4 5 Lozoya and Videgaray are featured prominently in spots from the 2012 presidential campaign 123 Mexican journalist Carlos Loret de Mola described being contacted by Pena Nieto s state and being told the former president described himself as unaware of Lozoya s corruption Loret de Mola also said Pena Nieto was already in contact with his successor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador to declare his version of the events Loret de Mola said that Pena Nieto was going to get lost within his own lies during the trial 124 On November 12 2020 the Attorney General s Office FGR officially accused Pena Nieto of being a traitor to the country and of electoral fraud due to the Odebrecht scandal along with Lozoya and Videgaray 125 126 During United States of America v Joaquin Guzman Loera Guzman s lawyer alleged that the Sinaloa drug cartel had paid hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes to Pena Nieto and his predecessor Felipe Calderon both presidents denied the claims with Pena Nieto s spokesman calling the claims completely false and defamatory 127 Alex Cifuentes who described himself as Guzman s right hand man later testified that Pena Nieto originally asked for 250 million before settling on 100 million 2 Allegations of crimes against humanity Edit In 2016 a report by the Open Justice Society Initiative claimed that there are reasonable grounds to believe that both the Mexican army and drug cartels had committed crimes against humanity during the Mexican Drug War The report accused both Pena Nieto and his predecessor Felipe Calderon of almost completely failing to ensure accountability for the actions of the Mexican army and of denying or minimizing the scale of the atrocities 128 In June 2018 human rights organizations presented documents alleging slayings tortures rapes and forced disappearances to the International Criminal Court and called on them to investigate 129 Public image EditMedia gaffes Edit Enrique Pena Nieto and Angelica Rivera in the 2012 Mexican Teleton Pena Nieto has had occasional lapses in memory or gaffes during public events or interviews 130 The most noted incident occurred during the International Book Fair of Guadalajara on 3 December 2011 131 On that day during a question and answer session he was asked by an audience member to name three books that had influenced him being only able to correctly reference the Bible 132 133 He then rambled tossing out confused title names asking for help in recalling authors and sometimes mismatching the two others 134 Other incidents have involved him not being able to recall Benito Juarez s year of birth 135 being unable to remember the acronym of the Federal Institute of Access to Information IFAI 136 137 changing the date of foundation of the state of Hidalgo 138 139 mistaking the capital of the State of Veracruz 140 mentioning the U S presidential candidate La senora Hillary Trump Mrs Hillary Trump 141 among others 142 of varying degree of substantiation or credibility These have gone viral on social media especially Twitter 143 144 and a website that counts the number of days since his last gaffe 145 Allegations of media bias Edit See also Penabot President Enrique Pena Nieto meets with former Cuban President Fidel Castro in La Habana Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan in the gardens of Los Pinos during a visit in September 2014 TelevisaTelevisa the largest conglomerate broadcasting in Mexico and other Spanish speaking countries was accused of tilting their coverage towards Pena Nieto ahead of the 1 July vote Thousands of students protested of the perceived bias throughout Mexico City and other cities 146 147 148 On 7 June 2018 The Guardian s Jo Tuckman reported about dozens of computer files forwarded to The Guardian by a source who worked with Televisa but has not been possible to confirm the authenticity of the documents suggesting that Televisa sold favorable coverage to Pena Nieto when he was governor of the state of Mexico and developed a smear campaign against Lopez Obrador ahead of his first bid for the presidency in 2006 149 Televisa and the PRI suggested that the documents were false 150 Time magazineOn the 24 March 2014 issue of the newsweekly Time Pena Nieto was on the front cover with the caption Saving Mexico 60 The front cover was met with widespread disapproval of the Mexican public prompting various spoofs on social media 151 152 even prompting a petition to have him removed from the cover Evaluations as president and legacy Edit In August 2016 Pena Nieto s approval ratings dropped to 23 percent 74 percent said they disapproved of his performance which newspaper Reforma revealed to be the lowest approval rating for a president since they began polling in 1995 153 The approval decreased to 12 by 19 January 2017 154 The lack of popularity and credibility of Pena Nieto s government is perceived to have caused the PRI to suffer monumental defeat in the 2018 Mexican general election where the party received the lowest vote percentage in their history The party s presidential candidate Jose Antonio Meade did not win a majority in any of Mexico s 300 voting locations while the PRI was also defeated in each of the nine gubernatorial elections The presidency of Mexico went to Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador from MORENA 155 The PRI also lost to MORENA in Atlacomulco the hometown of Enrique Pena Nieto 156 157 In 2020 Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador Pena Nieto s successor asked Mexicans if they would like to see former presidents face trial for allegations of corruption According to a survey conducted by El Universal 78 of Mexicans wanted the former presidents to face trial with Pena Nieto the one they wanted to be incarcerated the most 158 159 160 In popular culture Edit The 2014 Mexican comedy and political satire movie The Perfect Dictatorship had a plot based on the real life perceived Televisa controversy which consisted of Mexican citizens heavily perceiving the news media was unfairly favoring PRI candidate Enrique Pena Nieto during the 2012 presidential election in Mexico 161 Personal life EditFamily life Edit Pena Nieto with family in Atlacomulco on the 2012 election day In 1993 Pena Nieto married his first wife Monica Pretelini 1963 2007 and the couple had three children Paulina Alejandro and Nicole 162 163 Pena Nieto had two children outside his first marriage a son with Maritza Diaz Hernandez and another child with an undisclosed woman who died as an infant 164 Pretelini died on 11 January 2007 as the result of an epileptic episode 162 165 Pretelini played a supporting role during the campaign of Pena Nieto s governorship 162 In 2008 Pena Nieto began a relationship with Televisa soap opera actress Angelica Rivera whom he had hired to help publicize his political campaign for the State of Mexico The couple married in November 2011 166 167 After his tenure as president ended Rivera announced their divorce on 8 February 2019 168 Pena Nieto is the cousin of Alfredo del Mazo Maza the current governor of the State of Mexico of which his grandfather father distant uncle Arturo Montiel as well as Pena Nieto himself have previously been governors 169 Ancestry Edit Ancestors of Enrique Pena Nieto citation needed 16 Sotero Pena Garcia8 Eleuterio Severiano Pena Lopez17 Maria Rosalia Victoriana Lopez Mejia4 Francisco Javier Arturo Pena Arcos18 Eufemio Arcos Valdes9 Juana Arcos Colin19 Juana Rafaela Valvina Colin Gonzalez2 Gilberto Enrique Pena del Mazo20 Galo del Mazo y Conde10 Pedro del Mazo Villasante21 Maria de las Mercedes Villasante y Pliego5 Maria de los Dolores del Mazo Velez22 Antonio Velez Flores11 Josefa Velez Diaz23 Maria Marta Julita Margarita Diaz Ortega1 Enrique Pena Nieto24 Remigio Nieto Garduno12 Marcelino Ruperto Nieto Gimenez25 Marta Jimenez Monroy6 Constantino Enrique Nieto Montiel26 Leon Cleofas Antonio Montiel Bermudez13 Epigmenia Luz Lina or Epigmenia Lina de la Luz Montiel Sanchez27 Maria Evarista Simona Sanchez Garcia3 Maria del Socorro Ofelia Nieto Sanchez28 Jose Vidal Anastacio Sanchez Guadarrama14 Juan Silvano Sanchez Lovera29 Maria Mauricia Matiana Lovera Valdez7 Ofelia Sanchez Colin30 Jose Maria Colin Herrera15 Maria de los Remedios Antonia Colin Perez31 Maria Feliciana Ursula de Jesus Perez CardenasHonours Edit Pope Francis and President Enrique Pena Nieto accompanied by First Lady Angelica Rivera held a meeting in the premises of the Presidential hangar following the Pope s arrival in Mexico National honours Edit Collar of the Order of the Aztec Eagle 1 December 2012 Foreign honours Edit Emir of Qatar in the Mexican Palacio Nacional National Order of Juan Mora Fernandez Grand Cross with Gold Plaque awarded by Laura Chinchilla on 19 February 2013 170 National Order of the Legion of Honour Grand Cross awarded by Francois Hollande on 10 April 2014 Order of Prince Henry Grand Collar awarded by Anibal Cavaco Silva on 2 June 2014 171 Order of Isabella the Catholic Grand Cross with Collar awarded by King Juan Carlos I of Spain on 6 June 2014 172 Order of the Sun of Peru Grand Cross with Diamonds awarded by Ollanta Humala on 17 July 2014 173 Order of the Bath Honorary Knight Grand Cross awarded by Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom on 3 March 2015 174 Order of the Quetzal Grand Collar awarded by Otto Perez Molina on 13 March 2015 175 Order of the Southern Cross Grand Collar awarded by Dilma Rousseff on 26 May 2015 176 177 Order of Charles III Grand Cross with Collar awarded by King Felipe VI of Spain on 20 June 2015 178 Order of King Abdulaziz Collar awarded by King Salman of Saudi Arabia on 17 January 2016 179 Order of the Elephant Knight awarded by Queen Margrethe II of Denmark on 13 April 2016 180 181 Order of Merit of the Italian Republic Grand Cross with Cordon awarded by Sergio Mattarella on 21 July 2016 182 Order of the Liberator General San Martin Grand Collar awarded by Mauricio Macri on 29 July 2016 183 Military Order of Saint James of the Sword Grand Collar awarded by Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa on 17 July 2017 184 Medal of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay on 9 February 2018 185 See also Edit Mexico portal Biography portal2015 Mexican legislative election 2012 Mexican general election 2005 State of Mexico election PenabotReferences Edit Tepperman Jonathan 14 October 2016 How Mexico s president may have rescued his country The Washington Post Retrieved 28 April 2018 a b El Chapo paid 100m bribe to former Mexican president Pena Nieto BBC News 15 January 2019 Retrieved 16 January 2019 a b Montes Juan 11 August 2020 Ex Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto Accused of Corruption by Former State Oil Chief Wall Street Journal via www wsj com a b Krauze Leon Opinion A high profile corruption case could be a major victory for Mexico Politics must not derail it via www washingtonpost com a b Graham Dave 21 July 2020 Trial of ex Pemex boss threatens to lift lid on Mexico s cash box Reuters via www reuters com Ortega Ariadna 24 November 2018 FinDeSexenio Pena Nieto termina su gobierno reprobado por la mayoria Expansion Retrieved 12 August 2019 Eric Martin EMPosts More stories by Eric Martin Mexican President s Support Plumbs New Low as Gasoline Soars Bloomberg Retrieved 23 January 2017 3 Poor ratings for Pena Nieto political parties Pew Research Center s Global Attitudes Project 14 September 2017 Retrieved 28 April 2018 Argen David 9 January 2016 Donald Trump is no longer Mexico s most hated man It s Enrique Pena Nieto Macleans Retrieved 28 April 2018 a b c Archibold Randal C Zabludovsky Karla 3 July 2012 Enrique Pena Nieto The New York Times Retrieved 17 July 2012 Estevez Dolia 16 December 2013 The 10 Most Corrupt Mexicans of 2013 Forbes Retrieved 21 September 2022 Lo que quiza no sabes de Enrique Pena Nieto Becerril Andres 30 April 2012 Enrique Pena Nieto su hoja de vida pulcro y protegido Excelsior in Spanish Archived from the original on 14 September 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2012 Becerril Andres 1 May 2012 Enrique Pena Nieto su hoja de vida despertar politico Excelsior in Spanish Archived from the original on 14 September 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2012 Mexican president Pena Nieto plagiarized law thesis report says Reuters 22 August 2016 Reyes Juan Pablo 20 May 2012 Por sus tesis los conocereis Excelsior in Spanish Archived from the original on 14 September 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2012 Enrique Pena Nieto La cara joven del viejo PRI Terra Networks in Spanish June 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2012 Biography Enrique Pena Nieto Archived 1 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine website of the President of Mexico a b c d e Becerril Andres 2 May 2012 Enrique Pena Nieto su hoja de vida echado pa delante Excelsior in Spanish Archived from the original on 14 September 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2012 a b Becerril Andres 3 May 2012 Enrique Pena Nieto su hoja de vida un despegue firme in Spanish Telenews Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 17 July 2012 Lantigua Isabel F Enrique Pena Nieto El Mundo in Spanish Retrieved 17 July 2012 Wilkinson Tracy 9 July 2012 Mexico s Enrique Pena Nieto man of mystery Los Angeles Times Retrieved 10 July 2012 Enrique Pena Nieto Quien es Se convierte en diputado in Spanish MSN 2 July 2012 Archived from the original on 9 July 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2012 a b c Balderas oscar 2 July 2012 Enrique Pena Nieto regresa al PRI a la Presidencia de Mexico ADN Politico in Spanish Archived from the original on 5 July 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2012 Graham Dave 2 July 2012 REFILE PROFILE Enrique Pena Nieto the new face of Mexico s old rulers Reuters Retrieved 17 July 2012 Rinde protesta el candidato del PRI a la gubernatura del estado de Mexico El Universal in Spanish 3 February 2005 Archived from the original on 12 October 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2012 Seis anos atras Pena Nieto asumio la gubernatura en el Teatro Morelos Milenio in Spanish 12 September 2011 Retrieved 18 July 2012 Lindsay James M 2 July 2012 Hola Enrique Pena Nieto President Elect of Mexico Council on Foreign Relations Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 18 July 2012 a b Islas Laura 31 August 2011 Los compromisos de Pena Nieto ano por ano El Universal in Spanish Archived from the original on 26 May 2013 Retrieved 18 July 2012 a b Islas Laura 5 September 2011 6to Informe Pena Nieto los 10 datos claves de su sexenio El Universal in Spanish Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 Retrieved 18 July 2012 Sexto Informe de Gobierno Enrique Pena Nieto PDF in Spanish State of Mexico Archived from the original PDF on 6 November 2011 Retrieved 18 July 2012 Crime in Mexico The governor s miraculous achievement The Economist 22 September 2011 Retrieved 18 July 2012 a b Zapata Belen 4 June 2012 Atenco el tema que encendio a la Ibero y origino YoSoy132 in Spanish CNNMexico Archived from the original on 28 June 2012 Retrieved 18 July 2012 CNDH Recommendation 28 2006 Violence in Texcoco and San Salvador Atenco Archived from the original on 7 November 2006 Retrieved 17 October 2006 CNDH pide reparar dano por operativos de Atenco El Universal 17 October 2006 Justifica Pena Nieto uso de la fuerza en Atenco Esmas com in Spanish 14 May 2006 Archived from the original on 2 July 2012 Retrieved 18 July 2012 a b Pena Nieto presenta su libro Mexico la gran esperanza Milenio in Spanish 23 November 2011 Archived from the original on 28 January 2013 Retrieved 18 July 2012 Cardenas Jesus 23 November 2011 En la presentacion de su libro Enrique Pena Nieto dijo que Mexico tiene ante si la oportunidad de entrar a una nueva etapa de progreso in Spanish Televisa Retrieved 18 July 2012 Gallardo Arturo 28 November 2011 The PRI s unity candidate San Antonio Express News Archived from the original on 16 October 2012 Retrieved 18 July 2012 Manlio Fabio Beltrones anuncia su declinacion a la candidatura del PRI in Spanish CNNMexico 21 November 2011 Archived from the original on 15 July 2012 Retrieved 18 July 2012 Stevenson Mark 5 December 2011 Mexico top presidential contender can t name books The San Diego Union Tribune Retrieved 19 September 2018 Navarrette Jr Ruben 3 July 2012 Is Pena Nieto good news for Mexico CNN Retrieved 28 July 2012 El Universal archivo eluniversal com mx Retrieved 27 February 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Wilkinson Tracy 2 July 2012 Enrique Pena Nieto wins Mexico s presidency early results show Los Angeles Times Retrieved 18 July 2012 Pena Nieto set to become Mexico s president Al Jazeera 3 July 2012 Retrieved 18 July 2012 Jorge Ramos interviews Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador 21 November 2012 Retrieved 15 December 2012 Indemnizan a victimas del 1DMX El Universal 31 August 2016 Las huellas psicologicas de las detenciones arbitrarias del 1DMX Proceso Proceso 1 December 2014 C V DEMOS Desarrollo de Medios S A de 10 December 2012 La Jornada 1DMX no se olvida Jornada Quienes protestaron el 1Dmx y por que primera parte 25 November 2013 Archibold Richard C 1 December 2012 New President of Mexico Vows to Focus on Economy The New York Times Retrieved 4 December 2012 Booth William 1 December 2012 Pena Nieto sworn in as Mexico s president vows big change The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2 December 2012 Retrieved 2 December 2012 Pagan 300 pesos por generar violencia en toma de Pena Nieto Animal Politico in Spanish 3 December 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2013 Fotos Quien esta detras de los disturbios del 1 de diciembre Aristegui Noticias in Spanish 2 December 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2013 Provocadores cobraron 300 por actos vandalicos in Spanish 3 December 2012 With a little help from my friends The Economist Mexico City 8 December 2012 Retrieved 26 January 2014 Automaker Kia plans US 1 bn assembly plant in Mexico Mexico News Net 28 August 2014 Retrieved 28 August 2014 Volkswagen to announce US 1 billion investment in Mexico source Reuters Retrieved 7 March 2015 Crecen estados en Mexico a dos velocidades El Financiero Retrieved 17 October 2015 La zona del Bajio ha mostrado un gran dinamismo en los ultimos diez anos principalmente impulsada por la llegada de la industria automotriz y aeronautica que la ha posicionado como la zona con mayor crecimiento por encima de la media nacional a b Crowley Michael 24 February 2014 Saving Mexico How Enrique Pena Nieto s Sweeping Reforms Have Changed the Narrative in His Narco Stained Nation Time cover Crowley Michael 13 February 2014 The Committee to Save Mexico Time Crowley Michael 24 February 2014 Mexico s New Mission Time Mexico crea dos millones de empleos en tresose jobs anos El Pais Retrieved 21 September 2016 a b c d Harrup Anthony Mexican President Signs Law for Special Economic Zones The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 24 September 2016 a b Mexico s special economic zones How the bottom half lives The Economist Retrieved 24 September 2016 Mexico s Pena Nieto enacts major education reform BBC News 26 February 2013 Retrieved 3 October 2018 a b Agren David 15 May 2018 Mexico s education reforms flounder as more spent on PR than teacher training The Guardian Retrieved 3 October 2018 a b c Gomez Licon Adriana 5 July 2012 New Mexican president could target small gangs Fox News Retrieved 5 August 2012 Hernandez Daniel 19 June 2012 Mexico candidate Pena Nieto seeks Colombia drug fighter as advisor Los Angeles Times Retrieved 13 July 2012 a b c Corcoran Patrick 25 June 2012 What Mexico s Elections Mean for Crime Policy Part I InSight Crime Archived from the original on 4 July 2012 Retrieved 7 July 2012 Sanchez Raf 29 June 2012 Mexican election raises fears in Washington The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 3 July 2012 Sanchez Raf 30 June 2012 Presidential favorite worries U S officials as Mexicans head to polls The Vancouver Sun Archived from the original on 5 August 2012 Retrieved 8 July 2012 Mexico s Pena Nieto Will Use US Help in Drug War Fox News 6 July 2012 Retrieved 8 July 2012 Meyer Maureen amp Clay Boggs One Year into Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto s Administration Washington Office on Latin America 27 November 2013 Retrieved 20 February 2014 Mexico s new government coming out swinging The Economist 22 December 2012 Retrieved 26 December 2012 Mas poder al Presidente y a las Fuerzas Armadas las entranas de la Ley de Seguridad Interior Aristegui Noticias Mexican National Human Rights Commission Likely to Take Legal Action Against Security Law The Wire Reuters 18 December 2017 Retrieved 22 September 2022 Mexico s president signs controversial internal security law but says the supreme court will make the final decision Business Insider Reuters 22 December 2017 Retrieved 21 September 2022 O Neil Shannon K 12 July 2012 Pena Nieto and Energy Reform Council on Foreign Relations Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 16 July 2012 a b c Wheatley Jonathan 2 July 2012 Thinking of investing in Pemex Don t hold your breath Financial Times Retrieved 16 July 2012 a b c d Martin Eric 12 July 2012 Pena Nieto Push to Open Mexico Oil Fields Sparks Exxon Interest Bloomberg News Archived from the original on 14 May 2014 Retrieved 16 July 2012 a b Steffy Loren 18 July 2012 Pena dangling reforms in front of U S oil companies San Antonio Express News Retrieved 19 July 2012 Okeowo Alexis 24 January 2017 The Gas Price Protests Gripping Mexico The New Yorker Retrieved 14 February 2018 Fernandez de Castro Rafa 31 August 2016 We Want to Know Why Would Pena Nieto Invite Trump to Mexico Splinter Ramos Jorge 6 September 2016 Jorge Ramos Mexico s Shrinking President Splinter Enrique Pena Nieto EPN 31 August 2016 Al inicio de la conversacion con Donald Trump deje claro que Mexico no pagara por el muro Tweet via Twitter Donald J Trump realDonaldTrump 1 September 2016 Mexico will pay for the wall Tweet via Twitter Immigration Elise Foley Reporter Politics Post The Huffington 1 September 2016 Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto And Donald Trump Are Now in a Twitter Fight HuffPost Mexico stunned by Trump tweet on cancelling trip Fox News 26 January 2017 Daniella Diaz Mexican president cancels meeting with Trump CNN Retrieved 26 January 2017 Trump humillo a Pena via telefonica reporte de Dolia Estevez Aristegui Noticias 1 February 2017 Trump humillo a Pena y lo amago con enviar sus tropas a Mexico revela Dolia Estevez Proceso Proceso 1 February 2017 Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 2 February 2017 Trump Mexican president opt for phone call instead of visit The New York Daily News Godoy Daniela Garcia Santibanez 31 January 2017 Es la corrupcion lo que frena nuestra prosperidad no Trump Forbes Timberg Craig 17 July 2017 Spreading fake news becomes standard practice for governments across the world The Washington Post Retrieved 15 June 2019 Gobierno de Mexico manipula con bots las redes sociales Universidad de Oxford Proceso in Spanish 17 July 2017 Retrieved 15 June 2019 Ahmed Azam 25 December 2017 Villegas Paulina ed Con su enorme presupuesto de publicidad el gobierno mexicano controla los medios de comunicacion The New York Times in Spanish Retrieved 15 June 2019 Garcia Navarro Lulu What Happened To Mexico s Missing 43 Students In A Massacre In Mexico NPR Retrieved 19 June 2022 Ahmed Azam 29 April 2017 In Mexico It s Easy to Kill a Journalist The New York Times Partlow Joshua 9 November 2014 Luxurious presidential house draws Mexican press scrutiny via www washingtonpost com Webber Jude 19 November 2014 Mexico s first lady to sell White House family mansion Financial Times Archived from the original on 24 December 2022 Malkin Elisabeth 27 March 2015 In Mexico Firing of Carmen Aristegui Highlights Rising Pressures on News Media The New York Times Ya hay sentencia fue ilegal el despido de Aristegui de MVS video Aristegui Noticias 21 June 2018 Despido de Aristegui de MVS fue ilegal resuelve tribunal 21 June 2018 Procurare regreso de Aristegui y Gutierrez Vivo a la radio AMLO Aristegui Noticias 15 August 2018 Ahmed Azam Perlroth Nicole 19 June 2017 Using Texts as Lures Government Spyware Targets Mexican Journalists and Their Families The New York Times Agren David 19 June 2017 Mexico accused of spying on journalists and activists using cellphone malware The Guardian Mexico president Enrique Pena Nieto plagiarized thesis for law degree report The Guardian Associated Press 22 August 2016 Gajanan Mahita 22 August 2016 Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto Accused of Plagiarizing Law Thesis Time Santiago Nieto se echa para atras y acepta despido de Fepade El Financiero in Spanish Retrieved 19 June 2022 Ahmed Azam 2 December 2017 Mexico s Government Is Blocking Its Own Anti Corruption Drive Commissioners Say The New York Times Ore Zachary Fagenson Diego 8 July 2020 Fugitive former Mexican governor arrested in Miami Reuters via www reuters com Con Robles y Meade hubo desvios al estilo Estafa Maestra en Sedesol 10 January 2018 Por menos que lo que ha hecho la PGR contra Anaya me removieron a mi Santiago Nieto Aristegui Noticias 2 March 2018 Montes Juan 14 March 2018 Ex Mexican Prosecutor Says He Was Fired to Stymie Corruption Probe The Wall Street Journal Politicians suspected in bribery scandal BBC News 15 December 2017 Odebrecht pago campana de EPN El Universal 14 August 2017 Montes Juan 5 May 2017 Odebrecht Testimony in Brazil Points to Pemex Bribe in Mexico Ex official of Brazilian construction firm testified he was asked to pay 5 million to then chief of Mexican oil company The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 20 February 2018 Perez D M 8 March 2018 El PRI bloquea en el Congreso una investigacion del caso Odebrecht El Pais Caso Odebrecht deja detenidos en todo el mundo menos en Mexico news culturacolectiva com 2 March 2018 Fabiola 17 October 2018 Amparo de EPN y su gabinete porque algo hicieron y temen que los alcance la justicia Fiscal Regeneracion in Spanish Retrieved 15 June 2019 Gobierno de Pena Nieto busca anular investigaciones del fuero comun contra funcionarios federales in Spanish Aristegui Noticias 21 October 2018 Retrieved 15 June 2019 Enrique Pena Nieto No es asi jovenes el video con Luis Videgaray y Emilio Lozoya El Universal 11 August 2020 Enrique Pena Nieto manda mensaje a AMLO Si me citan voy a declarar Quien 14 August 2020 La FGR acusa al expresidente Pena Nieto de cohecho y traicion a la patria Acusa FGR a Pena Nieto de traidor y jefe criminal Valero Maria Jose 13 November 2018 Mexico s Pena Nieto Calderon Slam El Chapo s Bribe Allegations Bloomberg News Retrieved 16 January 2019 Cluskey Pete 8 June 2016 Mexican politicians may face ICC trial over drugs war The Irish Times Retrieved 21 January 2019 Corder Mike 11 June 2018 Mexican groups seek ICC probe of drug war crimes by military Associated Press Retrieved 21 January 2019 Camarena Rodrigo 6 December 2011 Enrique Pena Nieto s Candidacy Shows its Vulnerabilities Foreign Policy Blogs Retrieved 29 March 2013 Mexican poll contender Pena Nieto falters at book event BBC News 6 December 2011 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Stanglin Douglas 5 December 2011 Top Mexican candidate can t name 3 most influential books USA Today Retrieved 29 March 2013 Mexican candidate defends his lack of knowledge about books Fox News 6 December 2011 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Stevenson Mark 5 December 2011 Mexico Enrique Pena Nieto Mexican Presidential Contender Can t Name Books The Huffington Post Archived from the original on 22 July 2012 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Antezana Natalia 17 January 2013 Pena Nieto no idea tiene de en que anos vivio Benito Juarez in Spanish Revolucion Tres Punto Cero Archived from the original on 26 March 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Censuran en YouTube pifia de Pena Nieto sobre el IFAI Proceso in Spanish 16 January 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Confunde Pena el significado del IFAI El Diario in Spanish 17 January 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Ahora Pena confunde ano de fundacion de Hidalgo El Siglo de Torreon in Spanish 17 January 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Pena Nieto equivoca ano de fundacion del estado de Hidalgo in Spanish Terra 17 January 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Pena Nieto confunde la capital de Veracruz in Spanish CNN Mexico 3 April 2013 Archived from the original on 6 April 2013 Retrieved 3 April 2013 Mexican President Defends Trump Meeting ABC News 2 September 2016 Seis errores de Pena Nieto hacia la Presidencia in Spanish Sexenio 25 January 2012 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Mexico se burlan de los errores de Pena Nieto Tiempo Latino in Spanish 18 January 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Pena Nieto revive a Benito Juarez en 1969 segundo dia de errores tras el IFAI in Spanish 17 January 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2013 Dias sin pendejadas de EPN Days Without EPN Mistakes in Spanish Retrieved 29 March 2013 Mexico students protest alleged media bias Al Jazeera Retrieved 21 June 2018 Tuckman Jo Mexicans protest against media bias The Guardian Retrieved 21 June 2018 Leff Alex Mexico youth protest media s flattering coverage of Enrique Pena Nieto PRI Retrieved 22 June 2018 Tuckman Jo Computer files link TV dirty tricks to favourite for Mexico presidency The Guardian Retrieved 22 June 2018 Tuckman Jo Mexican media scandal secretive Televisa unit promoted PRI candidate The Guardian Retrieved 21 June 2018 Moreno Carolina Enrique Pena Nieto s Time Cover Sparks Outrage in Mexico Photos The Huffington Post Retrieved 21 June 2018 Leff Alex Time magazine just made lots of enemies in Mexico Public Radio International Retrieved 21 June 2018 Why Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto is so unpopular NBC News Eric Martin EMPosts More stories by Eric Martin Mexican President s Support Plumbs New Low as Gasoline Soars Bloomberg L P Retrieved 23 January 2017 El PRI se queda sin nada Morena gana 5 gubernaturas y el PAN 3 2 July 2018 El PRI perdio en Atlacomulco cuna de Enrique Pena Nieto El Universal 3 July 2018 Fabiola 2 July 2018 Pena Nieto pierde hasta Atlacomulco ante Morena Regeneracion Mayoria de los mexicanos pide juicio a expresidentes El Universal in Spanish 27 August 2020 Retrieved 22 September 2022 Mexican prosecution opens corruption investigation against ex president Pena Nieto and ex minister Luis Videgaray MercoPress 14 August 2020 Retrieved 22 September 2022 El 78 apoya juicio a expresidentes 6 de cada 10 participarian en consulta Forbes Mexico in Spanish 7 October 2020 Retrieved 22 September 2022 Linthicum Kate 3 November 2014 Mexican filmmaker Luis Estrada s satirical agenda hits home Los Angeles Times Retrieved 21 September 2022 a b c Cruz Angeles 12 January 2007 Fallece la esposa de Enrique Pena Nieto La Jornada in Spanish Retrieved 18 July 2012 Miselem Sofia 13 July 2012 The soap opera life of Mexico s next first lady Yahoo News Retrieved 18 July 2012 permanent dead link D Artigues Katia 22 January 2012 Arman leyendas sobre mi para descalificarme El Universal in Spanish Retrieved 18 July 2012 Jimenez Jacinto Rebeca 11 January 2007 Declaran muerte cerebral a Monica Pretelini El Universal in Spanish Retrieved 18 July 2012 Somos novios si El Universal in Spanish 13 November 2008 Retrieved 18 July 2012 The soap opera life of Mexico s next first lady France 24 12 July 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2012 permanent dead link Suarez Karina Cullell Jon Marton 8 February 2019 Angelica Rivera confirma su divorcio del expresidente mexicano Enrique Pena Nieto El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 8 February 2019 La familia Del Mazo Pena Montiel sumo ya 23 anos en control del Edomex Vanguardia SIPSE Grupo 19 February 2013 Pena Nieto recibe la Orden Nacional Juan Mora Fernandez Sipse com Cidadaos Estrangeiros Agraciados com Ordens Portuguesas in Portuguese Presidencia da Republica Portuguesa Retrieved 3 July 2015 Order of Isabella the Catholic Pena Nieto Induction PDF Spanish Official Journal BOE 6 June 2004 Retrieved 21 February 2017 Ollanta Humala y Pena Nieto firmaron 10 acuerdos en diversos sectores in Spanish Canal N pe 17 July 2014 Retrieved 3 July 2015 State Banquet Sistema de Noticias Cancilleria Guatemala www minex gob gt Ministerio das Relacoes Exteriores Decreto de 11 de Dezembro de 2015 Published by Imprensa Nacional in Section 1 of Diario Oficial da Uniao of 14 December 2015 ISSN 1677 7042 Otorga Pena Orden del Aguila Azteca a Rousseff recibe la Cruz del Sur Quadratin in Spanish 26 May 2015 Order of Charles III Pena Nieto Induction Spanish Official Journal BOE 20 June 2015 Retrieved 22 June 2015 Mexico eyes Gulf investment funds Arab News 17 January 2016 Modtagere af danske dekorationer kongehuset dk in Danish 12 December 2017 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Prince Henrik of Denmark President Enrique Pena Nieto and Queen Getty Images web Segretariato generale della Presidenza della Repubblica Servizio sistemi informatici reparto Le onorificenze della Repubblica Italiana Quirinale Pena Nieto acude a Argentina para estrechar lazos 24 horas in Spanish 29 July 2016 Pagina Oficial da Presidencia da Republica Portuguesa www presidencia pt Resolucion N 56 018 www impo com uy Retrieved 24 December 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Enrique Pena Nieto Wikiquote has quotations related to Enrique Pena Nieto Wikinews has news related to Enrique Pena Nieto Appearances on C SPAN Enrique Pena Nieto Biografia CIDOB Foundation in Spanish Enrique Pena Nieto Personal blog of Enrique Pena Nieto in Spanish Las 7 reformas que propone Pena Nieto para Mexico CNNMexico in Spanish Mexico Elections Institutional Revolutionary Party Candidate Enrique Pena Nieto Wins Presidency The Huffington PostPolitical officesPreceded byArturo Montiel Governor of the State of Mexico2005 2011 Succeeded byEruviel AvilaPreceded byFelipe Calderon President of Mexico2012 2018 Succeeded byAndres Manuel Lopez ObradorParty political officesPreceded byRoberto Madrazo Institutional Revolutionary Party nominee for President of Mexico2012 Succeeded byJose Antonio Meade Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enrique Pena Nieto amp oldid 1154088722, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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