Enrique Pena Nieto

Enrique Pena Nieto
Enrique Peña Nieto, GCB, GCIH, RE; born 20 July 1966) is the 57th President of Mexico. His six-year term began in 2012. A member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, he served as governor of the State of Mexico from 2005 to 2011. Peña Nieto was declared "president-elect" after the 2012 general election was declared valid by the Federal Electoral Tribunal, amidst accusations of electoral fraud. He took office on 1 December 2012, succeeding Felipe Calderón...
NationalityMexican
ProfessionStatesman
Date of Birth20 July 1966
CountryMexico
The route of expropriation, and especially in energy matters, is not what most promotes investment or generates greater confidence.
The United States is already Mexico's largest trading partner.
We have been using foreign affairs ministries to address security issues, but this practice is outdated. It's time to assign the handling of regional security to national organizations and expert institutions.
My commitment is to continue making a Mexico where families live in an environment of peace and better security.
Mexico is the second most important destination of U.S. exports. What does this mean? The U.S. sells to our country almost the same as it sells to all the European Union, five times what it sells Brazil. More than what it sells together to Brazil, Russia, China, and India.
Mexico has shelters, which care for children trying to cross the border, who have no company with them.
Mexico has perhaps, in some ways, a good practice, in which it has officials devoted precisely to hold those children, to retain those children that are crossing through our territory, who are coming from Central America.
Mexico has not achieved the advances that the population demands or deserves.
Mexico has lost its leadership, and a lot of that has to do with its poor performance and the lack of better results in our country.
Mexico has experimented with political change since the late 1980s.
Mexico cannot put up with this scenario of death and kidnapping.
Without better economic opportunity, you can't have better public security and vice versa.
I think money laundering is giving oxygen to organized crime.
To get elected in Mexico today, you have to compete like any democracy, and you don't do that by being manipulated.