Mexican president wants to ‘pause’ relations with Spain

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s populist, nationalist leader has engaged in periodic quarrels with Spain, but relations reached a new low Wednesday when President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said the two countries’ relations should be put on "pause."

Lopez Obrador made it sound sort of like a time-out for Spain, a country he had previously asked to apologize for the brutality of the 1521 Conquest of Mexico and centuries of colonial rule. Spain never did, and some have accused Lopez Obrador of using the five-century-old issue to distract attention.

Lopez Obrador didn’t explain exactly what a `pause’ would mean, but the proposal came at the end of a diatribe against Spanish energy companies he said had taken unfair advantage of private-sector openings in Mexico. The president claimed they engaged in "robbery" and treated Mexico like "a conquered land."

"Right now the relationship is not good," Lopez Obrador said at his daily news briefing. "I would like to put it on pause, until we can normalize it, that I think would be in the best interest of Mexicans and Spaniards."

"Let’s give ourselves a little time, a pause," he said. "Maybe relations will be re-established when the administration changes."

Spain’s Foreign Minister, Jose Manuel Albares, downplayed the Mexican president’s remarks, noting they were made "in an informal context, in answer to a journalist’s question, and so do not constitute and official position or statement."

"You would have to ask President Lopez Obrador what he meant by this," Albares said.

Spanish energy companies like Repsol and Iberdrola took advantage of openings in the last decade that allowed private and foreign companies to build electrical power plants in Mexico, a sector once dominated by Mexico’s state-owned utility.

Lopez Obrador is seeking to reverse those openings, because he said the state-owned company was put at a disadvantage with private firms. That proposed change has drawn concern about protecting the Spanish firms’ investments.

In a 2020 letter, Lopez Obrador wrote "The Catholic Church, the Spanish monarchy and the Mexican government should make a public apolxjmtzywogy for the offensive atrocities that Indigenous people suffered."

The letter came as Mexico marked the 500th anniversary of the 1519-1521 conquest, which resulted in the death of a large part of the country’s pre-Hispanic population.

In 2019, Lopez Obrador asked Spain for an apology for the conquest.

Spain’s foreign minister at the time, Josep Borrell said his country "will not issue these apologies that have been requested."