Mexican Leftist Leader López Obrador Warns ExxonMobil: Investing In Mexico's 
Oil 'Tantamount To Piracy

Dolia Estevez

Mexican leftist leader Andrés Manuel López Obrador has a message to foreign oil 
tycoons: investing in Mexico’s oil industry “would be like buying goods without 
a receipt, something crooked, tantamount to piracy.” In a letter toExxonMobil ( 
NYSE: XOM) CEO Rex W. Tillerson, the two-time Presidential candidate  warned 
that the Mexican Constitution prohibits the participation of private companies 
in the oil industry.

“We are informing Mr. Tillerson that the oil does not belong to President 
Enrique Peña Nieto, nor to the government, not even to the State, but rather to 
the people of Mexico,” López Obrador said in a telephone interview from Mexico 
City.

In the letter he tells Tillerson “to take into account the consequences of 
establishing business relations with a government that wants to violate the 
basic and spiritual principles of the Mexican Constitution.” Similar letters 
are being sent sent to Chevron, Shell, Total, Spain’s Repsol and Brazil’s 
Petrobras, López Obrador told me.

Asked what he thinks Tillerson’s response will be, López Obrador said: “That 
depends on what they end up deciding. What we are doing is complying with our 
duty of telling them that if the reform goes through, it will not be easy for 
foreign oil companies to operate in Mexico if they are perceived as accomplices 
of an assault against our national interests.”

He pledged to continue mobilizing his millions of followers in rallies and 
street protests.

López Obrador, a charismatic political figure who had an 84% approval rating 
when he resigned as Mayor of Mexico City to run for President in 2005 , said 
that while the U.S. tends to “downplay” countries’ internal opposition –like in 
Iran in the 1980s– he hopes this time around Americans understand the potential 
fall-out of “privatizing” the oil. “Thanks to the oil, Mexico has had political 
stability and internal peace. This has allowed Mexico and the U.S. to develop a 
harmonious relationship,” López Obrador said. Peña Nieto has denied the oil 
will be privatized.

Diana Negroponte, a nonresident senior fellow at Brookings Institution, said 
that the Mexican government “seeks to avoid, to the maximum, further energy 
reform street protests. These could endure for years well after passage of the 
law.” In an e-mail, Negroponte told me that the introduction of the secondary 
legislation in 2014,  following approval of the bill, “provides the government 
with enough time to educate Mexican citizens about the content and implications 
of the reform.”

In 2006, López Obrador lost the presidential election by the razor-thin margin 
of 0.56%. His supporters never recognized his defeat and claimed that the 
Presidency was stolen from him. He ran again in 2012, an election won by Peña 
Nieto with 38.21% of the vote; López Obrador took second place with 31.59%.

A few months into his term, Peña Nieto introduced a bill to change Articles 27 
and 28 of the Mexican Constitution, opening the way for domestic and foreign 
private sectors to enter into profit-sharing and production-sharing contracts 
with Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex), Mexico’s state owned oil monopoly. Peña Nieto 
is seeking to reverse the 1938 nationalization of the oil industry, an 
emblematic historical event that expelled British and American companies 
including Standard Oil, ExxonMobil’s predecessor, from Mexico. Tillerson is 
said to be “eager” to forget the past and return to Mexico.

In recent decades Mexico has seen oil production decline and  shallow-water 
fields dry up. The government insists that the overhaul is badly needed to lure 
global oil giants to invest in Mexico. Analysts say the reform has a good 
chance of succeeding, since it’s also supported by the center-right PAN party. 
The ruling PRI and PAN together have the two-thirds majority needed to amend 
the Constitution. Pemex Director General Emilio Lozoya has been giving 
assurances to private investors that the bill will be passed by the end of the 
year.

But passing the bill may not prove as simple as securing congressional votes. 
Recent Mexican and U.S. polls show that up to 65% of Mexicans oppose opening up 
Pemex, the world’s seventh-largest oil producer with annual sales of more than 
$100 billion. Moreover, The Washington Post reported that 80% of Mexicans 
associate Pemex with corruption, and do not believe that Peña Nieto’s plans 
will do much beyond creating more rich elites.

Asked if he has a Plan B, López Obrador said that if he fails to stop the 
reform, “we will take Peña Nieto to Court.” According to López Obrador, the 
Mexican Constitution calls for Presidents and senior government officials to be 
tried if they commit acts of treason such as ceding the country’s assets to 
foreigners. The reform, López Obrador claimed, would be an “act of treason” 
more serious than when Antonio López de Santa Anna gave away more than half of 
Mexico’s territory to the U.S. in 1848. In the letter López Obrador tells 
Tillerson: “We will not sit around with our arms crossed. We will fight for the 
oil to remain in the hands of our nation.”
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