Word: portillo
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...Relationship. Having assumed office only eleven weeks ago, López Portillo thought it practical to journey north to examine some of these questions with a neighboring President who has just begun to confront great issues...
This week LÒpez Portillo, accompanied by a phalanx of ministers and experts, visited Washington. There the former law school student and professor talked to members of the U.S. Supreme Court and addressed a meeting of Congress; before he left the U.S., side trips were scheduled to Williamsburg, Va., and Chicago, which is home to a sizable ( 150,000) Mexican population...
...principal topics on López Portillo's agenda with Jimmy Carter will be trade and the need to promote a new and healthier relationship between the two countries. Mexico is currently going through a grave economic crisis. Inflation is running at an explosive rate of 30%. Of Mexico's 63 million people, a vast number are either unemployed or, almost as bad, underemployed. The trade deficit has been growing steadily and now stands at $3.2 billion. Despite this, López Portillo has not gone abegging to the Oval Office, although he would like adjustments...
...Presidents will discuss an ambitious plan for the development of Mexico's petrochemical industry, and Carter is expected to assure López Portillo of adequate U.S. aid. Then there are other substantive questions with which Carter and López Portillo must deal. To begin with, there is the drug problem. Mexico has become the principal supplier to U.S. users of marijuana and heroin. López Portillo has ordered his army to destroy the crops (see box). The crackdown has also filled some Mexican jails with U.S. citizens who were caught with drugs in their possession; about...
Next is the matter of Mexico's illegal migrant workers. Each year Immigration agents all over the U.S. round up tens of thousands of illegals and send them home again. López Portillo has devised a two-pronged solution to the problem: the U.S. should relax its immigration rules to help this safety valve on Mexico's chronic unemployment, and should encourage American investment in Mexican industry, thereby providing more jobs...