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Mexican president seeks to strengthen U.S. relations despite Trump’s barbs

Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto gives an address in response to the U.S. presidential election in Mexico City, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2016. The Mexican president said in a brief televised address that he has spoken with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump to congratulate him and his family. He said they agreed to meet during the transition period to discuss the U.S.-Mexico relationship. AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell

Mexico’s president said on Friday he wanted to strengthen relations with his new U.S. counterpart Donald Trump, whose threats and barbs against the country raised fears of a major economic crisis, and battered its currency.

President Enrique Pena Nieto, pilloried at home for meeting Trump in August after the New York businessman called Mexican migrants rapists and murderers, said on Twitter he would defend the interests of Mexico and its people in a “respectful” dialogue.

READ MORE: Donald Trump protests spread across the world, but some support him

“We will work to strengthen our relationship with shared responsibility,” said Pena Nieto, who likened Trump’s rise to the ascent of Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini after the American’s broadsides early in the election campaign.

Trump vowed to build a wall along the U.S. southern border to keep Mexicans out and threatened to tear up a joint trade deal if he cannot recast it in favor of the United States.

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The White House website said on Friday that Trump was committed to renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which underpins Mexico’s economy, and would move to withdraw if no “fair deal” is forthcoming.

Mexico’s government said Pena Nieto will make a foreign policy address on Monday morning, a few days before a delegation of senior Mexican officials travel to Washington to discuss relations with top Trump advisers.

The delegation will be led by Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray, who said in an interview late on Friday that he will meet with senior White House aides as well as newly-confirmed U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Gen. John Kelly.

Videgaray pledged to “negotiate without fear” and said he will work to ensure that remittances sent from Mexicans living in the United States to relatives back home are protected from any seizure.

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In this Aug. 31, 2016 file photo, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump walks with Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto at the end of their joint statement at Los Pinos, the presidential official residence, in Mexico City. Trump called his surprise visit to Mexico City a ‘great honor.’ A week later one of Nieto’s closest advisers and confidants, Finance Secretary Luis Videgaray, resigned in a move seen as linked to the unpopular decision to invite Trump to visit Mexico. AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills

Trump’s inauguration was marked by subdued protests across Mexico. One political activist on Mexico City’s main thoroughfare held up a banner declaring “Racist, gringo Trump…son of Satan, you are a danger to the world.”

More than three-quarters of Mexicans hold a bad or very bad opinion of Trump, according to a poll of 600 people by polling firm Gabinete de Comunicacion Estrategica (GCE).

Trump has threatened to slap hefty tariffs on Mexican-made goods, sending the peso to a string of historic lows against the dollar. Concern about him is widespread.

Still, Mexico’s peso was the strongest-performing among the top 10 most-traded currencies after Trump’s inaugural address in Washington made no mention of the country. It was up more than 1.6 percent at 21.582 per dollar in the early afternoon.

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Unpopular president

The GCE poll also showed fear about Trump’s impact on the country’s material well-being. Eighty percent of Mexicans see an economic crisis and falling investment as very or somewhat likely during Trump’s administration, it showed.

On Friday, his strategy of pressuring companies directly to move jobs back to the United States also fueled protests outside a Ford Motor Company store in Mexico City.

“No to terrorism against free companies,” said a sign at the protest, where demonstrators pummeled piñatas of Trump.

READ MORE: Mexico says again country won’t pay for Donald Trump border wall

This month, Ford canceled a planned $1.6 billion factory in Mexico, saying it would instead invest $700 million in Michigan, after a similar move by United Technologies Corp’s Carrier unit a few weeks after Trump’s election win in November.

Some Mexicans questioned whether Trump would be as tough on the country once bound by the responsibilities of office.

“Campaign promises are one thing, but what you’re going to do as president is a different matter,” said Pedro Pena, a worker at a parcel delivery firm in Ixmiquilpan, a town north of Mexico City which many migrants have left for the United States.

Mexico’s President Enrique Pena Nieto delivers a speech to the media to announce new cabinet members at Los Pinos presidential residence in Mexico City, Mexico, September 7, 2016. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido

Nevertheless, Pena Nieto is not in a strong position. His approval ratings are the lowest for any president in years, and there is simmering discontent over a gasoline price hike this month that spurred nationwide protests and looting.

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“Pena Nieto is a cancer, he is inept, people don’t want him there,” said Efrain Monter, a retired engineer in Actopan in the central state of Hidalgo. “He promised lots of things, to lower electricity prices, water and now he is doing the opposite.”

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