
Editor’s note: Trump’s LA crackdown pushes Sheinbaum into a corner
by Andrew Law.
The surreal events this week in my old hometown of Los Angeles are spiraling from a local crisis into an international fiasco. Mexico’s former Ambassador to the United States, Martha Bárcena, tells me in stark terms that the relationship is trapped, “Like a hostage, in the middle of a very, very extreme fight for power in the US.”
It all started with ICE raids targeting Home Depots across LA and the detention of people in the basement of ICE’s downtown office. Protesters gathered spontaneously outside ICE headquarters, prompting White House aide Stephen Miller to engineer an unprecedented and aggressive response: President Trump federalized California’s National Guard, a move Governor Gavin Newsom says has no legal grounds. It was, Newsom insists, designed to incite anger and provoke more demonstrations.
And provoke it did.
We’re now inundated with incendiary visuals of protesters waving Mexican flags amidst flames and debris — images eagerly pounced on by Miller and Trump’s MAGA followers as supposed proof of a “foreign insurrection.”

Claudia Sheinbaum’s terrible, no good, very bad week
by David Agren.
Claudia Sheinbaum has suffered perhaps the worst week of her administration – marked by the murders of two senior functionaries in the Mexico City government.
How bad was her week?
Over the weekend, the Cuauhtemoc, a Mexican Navy ship, crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge while on a global goodwill tour. The crash, which New York City officials say was caused by a mechanical failure, resulted in the deaths of Naval cadets, América Yamilet Sánchez, 20, and Adal Jair Maldonado, 23.
On Tuesday, Ximena Guzmán, personal secretary to mayor Clara Brugada, and José Muñoz, a government advisor, were killed in cold blood as they commuted on a busy thoroughfare. The suspect remains at large and no motive has been offered for the assassinations.
The day before in Guanajuato state, seven young people were killed when gunmen arriving in SUVs shot up a parish festival in the town of San Bartolo de los Berrios.

Editor’s Note: No cause for celebration
by Andrew Law.
Did Mexico dodge Trump’s tariffs? President Claudia Sheinbaum says yes. She told supporters this week that USMCA survived, that Mexico’s economy is strong, and that they should celebrate.
Mexico may have avoided new tariffs. But unlike various peer nations, it was already under heavy ones. Trump’s 25% tariff on non-USMCA auto imports kicked in Wednesday night. That hits over 40% of Mexico’s car exports. Steel and aluminum tariffs remain. And there’s the 25% general tariff on non-USMCA goods - about half of Mexico’s exports. These are already having impacts.
According to Sheinbaum, this week’s events shows the US “respects” Mexico and has a “good relationship” with it. If this is good, I’d hate to see bad.






