MEXICO CITY — Mexico's newly elected president, the first woman to win the job, faces a long list of challenges, including persistent cartel violence, a deeply divided country, cash-straitened social programs and the long shadow of her mentor, outgoing President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.
But for some analysts it mostly comes down to three things: money, dialogue and the outcome of the U.S. presidential election.
Claudia Sheinbaum, who begins her six-year presidential term Oct. 1, has four months ahead of her to define her administration's agenda. During this time, López Obrador is expected to continue delivering his daily morning press briefings as he tries to solidify his legacy.
The coexistence might be far from easy: He has divided society; she says she wants to unite it. He is a leader of the masses; she is an academic and a scientist.
López Obrador has said he will not interfere with his protege's administration. ''I do not aspire to be a ‘moral leader,' a ‘maximum boss,' a ‘caudillo,'" he said Monday.
He has insisted that once his presidency is over, he is going to ''talk with the trees, live with the birds.'' Yet, it was he who announced Monday that current Treasury Secretary Rogelio Ramírez de la O would remain in his post through the next administration in a bid to avoid a market meltdown.
The balance between continuity and change will not be simple.
A top economic challenge will be whether Sheinbaum will have the money to continue her predecessor's popular social programs, considering the government has a big deficit of almost 6% that the Treasury has vowed to reduce.