Foxilandia is a critical term used in the Mexican political culture to make reference to the administration (2000–2006) of President Vicente Fox.

Vicente Fox before the Mexican Congress

It was first used during the appearance of President Fox before the Congress of the Union in September 2004,[1] in arguments by the opposition that Fox's vision of Mexico greatly differed from theirs. The connotation is that "Foxilandia", or Fox's vision, is impossible, unrealistic, a fantasy, while, in logical contrast, theirs would be balanced and realistic.

This term has been used by Vicente Fox in his radio program Fox Contigo ("Fox With You")[2] Andrés Manuel López Obrador,[3] and journalists from major newspapers in Mexico such as El Universal,[4] La Jornada[5] and Reforma.[6] Foxilandia has also been used in political documentaries such as Aventuras en Foxilandia by Carlos Mendoza Aupetit,[7] and Who is Mr. López by director Luis Mandoki and the film Un mundo maravilloso (2006) by film director Luis Estrada.[8]

Foxilandia by Luis Mandoki edit

Chapter 14 of Luis Mandoki's Who is Mr. López documentary is titled "Foxilandia"[9]) journalists Miguel Ángel Granados Chapa, Jaime Avilés and professors Denise Dresser (Autonomous Technological Institute of Mexico, ITAM) and Lorenzo Meyer (Colegio de México, COLMEX) and news anchor Joaquín López-Dóriga contrast Fox's official declarations with reality as well as Fox's campaign promises and its results such as:

  • Economy growing at a 7% rate and creating 1,350,000 jobs, while the economy grew 0.7% from 2001-2003[10] and unemployment grew 188%[11] Nevertheless, the rise in unemployment can be attributed to the record deficit in the United States.
  • Promise of deep political change but the Undersecretary of Finance during Carlos Salinas's government became Secretary of Finance during Fox's term and the Secretary of Finance during Ernesto Zedillo's government became Governor of the Bank of Mexico.
  • Fox highlighted a change in customs in Mexican politics by saying that in his term the President would not interfere with the electoral process. The documentary shows video-footage of several demonstrations of Fox supporting the candidates of the ruling party and of Alfonso Durazo, his former personal secretary, declaring that no previous President was ever as active campaigning for candidates of his own party as was Fox. However, it is widely known in Mexico that Presidents before Vicente Fox always handpicked their successor.

The term has also been used by Grupo Reforma to describe Fox's project of a library of his legacy in his hometown of San Francisco del Rincón, Guanajuato.[6] The library, however, will be a project that is closely modeled after presidential libraries in the United States, showcasing objects and documents important to the Fox presidency.

References edit

  1. ^ "cimacnoticias.com | Inédito rechazo de oposición para mensaje presidencial". Archived from the original on 2005-02-21. Retrieved 2006-11-25.
  2. ^ Vicente Fox: aquí es foxilandia, Official site of the Presidency of Mexico, October 9, 2004.
  3. ^ Example of video about AMLO using "Foxilandia"
  4. ^ El Universal, Fox, filias y fobias, November 17, 2006.
  5. ^ La Jornada, Rechazo obrero a Foxilandia, September 2, 2005.
  6. ^ a b Grupo Reforma, Harán realidad a 'Foxilandia': "Con la ampliación de la carretera de dos a cuatro carriles y la transformación del centro de la comunidad rural de San Cristóbal, el ex Presidente Vicente Fox cumplirá un sueño: tener su foxilandia."
  7. ^ Mil horas de memoria histórica
  8. ^ "Un mundo maravilloso". Archived from the original on 2007-05-17. Retrieved 2007-05-07.
  9. ^ Who is Mr. López?, Chapter 14: "Foxilandia"
  10. ^ Jornada, Calderón rebasará a Fox por la derecha, November 11, 2006
  11. ^ Jornada, Creció desempleo abierto 188 por ciento durante el sexenio de Fox, October 21, 2006

External links edit