Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Mexico is a safe country.
I see myself as a family man.
Ah, 'The Departed' is really good.
Pemex will remain 100 percent Mexican.
Together we are building a new Mexico.
Behind every crime is a story of sadness.
My only definition is that I am a pragmatist.
I have a hard time recalling the titles of books.
Politics is an instrument that can transform society.
Mexico is a mosaic of different realities and beauties.
There is no doubt a president has to govern for everyone.
My government's first aim will be to bring peace to Mexico.
I propose changing fear for hope. I propose changing Mexico.
I think money laundering is giving oxygen to organized crime.
The United States is already Mexico's largest trading partner.
The state is obliged to fight corruption within the government.
Mexico cannot put up with this scenario of death and kidnapping.
Mexico has experimented with political change since the late 1980s.
One single visit is not enough to be able to say that you know Mexico.
Mexico has not achieved the advances that the population demands or deserves.
I plan to open Mexico's energy sector to national and foreign private investment.
Each dollar Mexico exports to the U.S. has a content of American production of 40¢.
I believe the conditions are very favorable for Mexico to grow. I'm very optimistic.
Politics and more politics - that's how you work towards the building of agreements.
Whenever there are some who have more opportunities than others, this feeds corruption.
Without better economic opportunity, you can't have better public security and vice versa.
The North American Free Trade Agreement marked a fundamental change in the global trade scheme.
I will run an open government that speaks with honesty, seeks opinion, listens to its citizens.
In a democratic society, we politicians have to accept criticism, especially when it is founded.
Education reform has as its main purpose to make sure that the education delivered is of quality.
One of the big goals of my administration will be to reposition Mexico again as an emerging power.
U.S. politicians are increasingly recognizing the relevance of the Hispanic vote in U.S. politics.
In the Mexico we want, there is no room for corruption, for cover-ups, and least of all for impunity.
Mexico has shelters, which care for children trying to cross the border, who have no company with them.
Do not have any doubt that I will apply the law over whoever is responsible for not complying with the law.
There have been no voices against the structural reforms that I have proposed, especially the energy reform.
It's obvious that Pemex doesn't have the financial capacity to be in every single front of energy generation.
Acting aggressively will allow our youth to aspire for better-paid jobs and find alternatives to criminality.
My commitment is to continue making a Mexico where families live in an environment of peace and better security.
My interest is to establish an agenda of engagement with Mexicans that will respond to Mexicans' most urgent needs.
To get elected in Mexico today, you have to compete like any democracy, and you don't do that by being manipulated.
I will be the government of increasing economic growth and creating jobs. Take it from me that that's the main issue.
Mexico has acquired unique experience during its integration into global value chains, especially in the automotive industry.
More than 1 million U.S. citizens live in Mexico, and my country remains the largest source of immigrants to the United States.
Do you agree that when there's tension and an obsession to want to hit the ball is when you hit it worst? You have to be loose.
Pemex becomes a productive company of the state, but it will have competition and can make associations with the private sector.
Free trade, far from protectionism, is the path that we should take to make Latin America a thriving actor in the global economy.
The route of expropriation, and especially in energy matters, is not what most promotes investment or generates greater confidence.
Mexico has lost its leadership, and a lot of that has to do with its poor performance and the lack of better results in our country.
Mexico urgently needs a series of structural reforms that will detonate its true economic potential and generate more public welfare.