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Mexico’s President Blasts Court on Salary Ruling


Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador slashed the presidential salary by more than half when he took office Dec. 1, to 108,000 pesos ($5,300) a month.
Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador slashed the presidential salary by more than half when he took office Dec. 1, to 108,000 pesos ($5,300) a month.

The Mexican president is butting heads with the Supreme Court just one week into office after judges suspended a law that would cap public sector salaries, one of his key campaign promises.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador accused the judges of looking after their own pocketbooks and of failing to grasp the “new reality” that his administration represents. The salary cuts are part of a rebalance in government that aims to raise wages for lower income workers while chopping those of top officials.

“They themselves decide that they are going to keep receiving exaggerated, stratospheric salaries — salaries of up to 600,000 pesos ($29,000) a month — those who impart justice,” Lopez Obrador complained to reporters Saturday, before repeating one of his favorite mantras: “There can’t be a rich government with a poor people.”

Budget in question

The freeze throws into question the government’s 2019 budget plans, which are due Dec. 15. The suspension is pending a definitive ruling by the court.

The Mexican Congress decreed in November that, with few exceptions, no public employee should earn more than the president. Lopez Obrador’s Morena party has a majority in both houses of Congress. The National Human Rights Commission then asked the court to review the law, saying it appeared to violate the constitution.

Lopez Obrador slashed the presidential salary by more than half when he took office Dec. 1, to 108,000 pesos ($5,300) a month.

Low wages

Mexico has the lowest wages of any country in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, with a net income per capita of $1,281 per month.

The proposed salary cuts have caused great uncertainty for many public sector workers, with those who can leaving posts for jobs in the private sector.

Lopez Obrador said Saturday that he expects the legislative branch to have the final say on salaries, since they approve the annual budget.

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