Canada, Mexico divided on Venezuela amid united push for new NAFTA
OTTAWA — Canada and Mexico may be united in wanting to bring closure to North America’s unresolved trading future, but they are diametrically opposed on how to solve Venezuela’s political and economic crisis.
The cleavage between Canada and Mexico over the upheaval enveloping their broader hemispheric neighbourhood — the meltdown of once prosperous Venezuela that has spawned a three-million-plus refugee crisis — was on full display this week as lawmakers from both countries met in Ottawa to discuss their shared interests.
Mexico was a charter member of the Lima Group of countries when it formed in August 2017 before socialist firebrand Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador was sworn in on Dec. 1 as Mexico’s new president.
Lopez Obrador’s government has been conspicuously absent from the Lima Group’s recent declarations recognizing opposition leader Juan Guaido as the legitimate interim leader of Venezuela, and the group’s calls for the military to switch allegiance to him from the country’s socialist president, Nicolas Maduro.