The Mexican election, on Canada Day, could be all about the U.S.
But when voters go to the polls on Sunday, domestic dynamics may be a bigger determinant. Mexicans, expected to elect leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador as president, may also give strong support to his insurgent National Regeneration Movement, which would deal a blow to the Institutional Revolutionary Party and National Action Party establishments.
Lopez Obrador — or AMLO, as he's widely known — "clearly has broken with the political establishment and wants to chart a different course," said Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue, a Latin American-focused think tank. "He has a huge constituency that have just become fed up with Mexico's crime and corruption and violence and impunity."
But despite the focus on internal troubles, international issues with continental consequence loom: NAFTA negotiations are ongoing, as is the migration crisis. And the enduring problem of drugs — the root of so much Mexican violence — takes a turn in October when marijuana becomes legal in Canada, just as it has been decriminalized in several states in the U.S.
The election stakes aren't just high for AMLO and Mexicans, but for President Donald Trump and Americans, too.
"George W. Bush said six days before 9/11 that Mexico was the U.S.'s most important bilateral relationship, and I thought that was true then and I think that's probably true today," said Shifter. Listing a litany of interrelated issues, including trade, migration, drugs, crime, water and the environment, Shifter added that "it's hard to see any other country where there's so much at stake and a bilateral relationship of great consequence."
And of great conflict, too.
"This is the worst that it's been," said Shifter, speaking of the bilateral dynamic. Sure, there have been tough times before between Washington and Mexico City, including rifts during the Reagan era over Central American wars and more recently during the Iraq war. "But this sort of goes to the bone; I mean you never had [Ronald] Reagan or George W. Bush saying these things about Mexicans, that kind of insult, just personal attacks and offensive language."