Claudia Sheinbaum’s election as Mexico’s first female president has shored up the left’s dominance of Latin America, a region more used to sometimes-dramatic political shifts over the past few years.
Sheinbaum is to take office on Oct. 1, replacing her political mentor, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, known by his initials, AMLO, who became the country’s first leftist president in 2018.
Her victory means that both Brazil and Mexico — Latin America’s two biggest nations in terms of population and economic output — remain firmly on the left side of the political spectrum.
“Under a Sheinbaum presidency there will probably not be much change on Latin America’s political chessboard,” said Michael Shifter, an expert at the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington.
“Sheinbaum may be even more committed to leftist ideology than AMLO, though her administration is not likely to seek to exert much influence on like-minded allies in the region,” he said.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who replaced far-right former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro in January last year, warmly welcomed Sheinbaum’s election and vowed to deepen economic ties.
Chile, Colombia, Guatemala and Honduras have also shifted to the left over the past few years.
Although they are accused of being authoritarian, the governments of Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela consider themselves socialist, as does Bolivian President Luis Arce.
In contrast, Argentine ultra-liberal conservative President Javier Milei swept to victory in November last year in a country weary of traditional politics and a severe economic crisis.
He is now part of a regional right-wing bloc that also includes Ecuador, Paraguay and El Salvador.
Sheinbaum was elected on a promise to preserve Lopez Obrador’s legacy, but nuances between the two put her closer to a “progressive left,” said writer and analyst Jorge Zepeda Patterson.
While Lopez Obrador, 70, is a “social fighter of rural origin,” Sheinbaum hails from the “modern urban middle class,” he said.
Even so, her victory means that Mexico is going against a trend in Latin America over the past few years of swings between the right and the left.
Of the 22 presidential elections held in the region since 2019, only four resulted in political continuity, according to an analysis by the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance.
“Alternation is now the norm in Latin America,” where a desire for change reflects a “disappointment with governments that are ineffective in keeping promises,” said Marcela Rios, Latin America director of the intergovernmental organization — which promotes democracy — who is also Chile’s former minister of justice.
“It’s positive because it shows that electoral institutions are fulfilling their role,” Rios said.
The biggest change has undoubtedly been in Argentina with the arrival of Milei, an outspoken outsider and self-declared “anarcho-capitalist.”
The presidents who did keep their jobs include popular gang-busting Salvadoran president Nayib Bukele, who was re-elected at the start of the year.
Sheinbaum’s victory comes at a time when Latin America faces major challenges requiring regional cooperation, from climate change to insecurity and US-bound migration, Rios said.
The region struggles to speak with “one voice,” partly due to the existence of competing multilateral forums, some with an ideological bias, she said.
If former US president Donald Trump, who has pledged the biggest ever US deportation program, returns to the White House then he would pose “a huge challenge” to the region, Rios said.
“I think this will change the configuration of alliances again,” she added. “Latin America must be prepared.”
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