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News > Latin America

Mexico Postpones White House Visit After Testy Trump Phone Call

  • Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto (L) has postponed plans for his first visit to U.S. President Donald Trump's White House after a testy phone call.

    Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto (L) has postponed plans for his first visit to U.S. President Donald Trump's White House after a testy phone call. | Photo: Reuters

Published 24 February 2018
Opinion

A Mexican official said Trump lost his temper during the conversation, but U.S. officials described Trump as frustrated and exasperated. 

U.S. President Donald Trump and Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto have postponed plans for the Mexican leader's first visit to the White House, after a testy phone call involving Trump's push for a border wall, a senior U.S. official said on Saturday.

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"The two leaders agreed now was not the immediate right time for a visit, but that they would have their teams continue to talk and work together," Reuters reported the official as saying.

Mexican officials had been talking about a summit between Trump and Peña Nieto in the next few weeks, without specifying when.

The Washington Post, which first reported the delay earlier on Saturday, said the two leaders spoke for about 50 minutes on Tuesday, but the discussion led to an impasse when Trump refused to publicly affirm Mexico's position that it would not fund construction of the wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

A Mexican official said Trump lost his temper during the conversation, the newspaper reported, but U.S. officials described Trump as frustrated and exasperated, because he believed it was unreasonable for Peña Nieto to want him to back off his campaign promise of forcing Mexico to pay for the wall.

Mexico's foreign ministry said it had nothing to say about the call, other than a statement on Tuesday that said Trump had expressed condolences for a helicopter crash in Mexico and both sides had committed to advancing the bilateral agenda of trade, migration and security.

The wall, a key item for Trump's supporters, has become a sticking point in talks to keep alive a federal program that protects from deportation young people who were brought to the United States illegally as children.

In his latest budget proposal to Congress, Trump requested US$23 billion for border security, most of it for building the wall.

Pena Nieto, who met Trump in July on the sidelines of a G20 summit, canceled an earlier meeting after Trump threatened to impose a tax on Mexican imports to pay for the wall. Trump also met the Mexican president once during the 2016 election campaign. 

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