In Mexico, the ownership of the federal executive has been renewed every six years since 1934. And with the arrival of a new president come projects, public policies and a particular way of governing, acting and even speaking. .
In the same way, within the framework of the presidential system which embraces the country, each president makes every effort to leave his mark; An example of this is each jurisdiction’s flagship megaprojects, such as bridges and roads, monuments, airports and involuntarily iconic phrases.
The last president of the PRI of the 20th century, and with whom the tricolor’s consecutive dominance in the federal government ended, was Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de Leon, who during his 1994 presidential campaign sketched one of the phrases that will mark his government.
The president who allowed the alternation told him “I don’t bring cash” to an indigenous woman who approached him to offer handicrafts. However, the phrase was taken by his political opponents as a reflection of his relationship with the Mexican people and their economic situation.
The ex-president Vicente Renard He starred in a tense moment in April 2002 that alienated his administration from the then government Fidel Castro In Cuba. As part of the Extraordinary Summit of the Americas in the city of Monterrey, the PAN member wanted to make sure that Fidel would not meet with the then President of the United States, George Bush, so he made her an offer.
According to audio of a leaked call between the executives, the Mexican asked Castro for a response on whether he would participate or not. As part of the negotiations, Fox Quezada offered him alternatives, including going to lunch and sitting next to him: “You eat and you leave.”
For its part, another sentence that marked the government of Guanajuato was: “Mexicans do jobs that even black people don’t want to do”which he expressed in an attempt to defend migrants residing in the United States.
Even without being president, Felipe Calderon He released one of his government’s most memorable phrases. After the 2006 presidential elections were held, and as part of the electoral authority’s acknowledgment of her triumph – despite the closed results and amid accusations of voter fraud – the PAN member offered an interview to Denise Merker where he said the sentence.
“It’s been said that I’m going forward because they’ve helped me, because my opponents are very active, because the campaign has been very good; Well look, the truth is I win, as they say in my country: ‘haiga sido como haiga sido’”he expressed.
Enrique Pena Nieto, predecessor of Andrés Manuel López Obrador, left a wide variety of expressions that, thanks to the explosion of social networks, have been recorded for posterity. At least a dozen of the Mexican’s best occurrences could be mentioned, since his presidential image was marked by his unique locutions.
In January 2017, after the fuel price hike, Peña Nieto posted a video justifying his government’s decision, which concluded with the message: “What would you have done?”
On the other hand, in February 2015, during a press conference, the former president declared:I know they don’t clap”ahead of the media response to his presentation.
“We are about to come down here in Oaxaca; we are like a minute, no, less, like five minutes”, is another of those pronounced by the PRI, after the earthquake of September 7, 2017.
“I once felt a tremor that no one else feltand “I am clear that I didn’t come here to win a popularity medal.” are other of his most popular phrases.