Mexico will wait and see if U.S. President Donald Trump goes through with his threat to slap tariffs on its southern neighbor on Tuesday, the nation's president said on Monday, adding that Mexico has back-up plans in case the tariffs go into place.
President Donald Trump's tariff threats jolted the Mexican government to act on crime, but Mexico must wait a little longer for his final decision.
Trump had threatened to impose tariffs in February before suspending them at the last minute, when Mexico sent 10,000 National Guard troops to their shared border to crack down on drug trafficking and illegal immigration.
There has been a dramatic drop in the number of people gathering at the U.S. border and trying to cross. Can it help Mexico stave off President Trump’s threatened tariffs?
In Mexico's Culiacan, a city of 1 million residents, an elementary school principal starts each day checking for shootouts before deciding whether to cancel classes
Several cartel operatives said that for the first time in years, they genuinely feared arrest or death at the hands of the authorities.
A Texas couple vacationing in Mexico City were found dead in their apartment rental on Tuesday, Mexican police say.
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You might not have known it existed, but Tlaxcala real estate offers the chance to enjoy nature in Mexico's safest state.
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