Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum gestures during an event to give details on the country's response to U.S. President Donald Trump's 25% tariffs on imports from Mexico, including retaliatory tariffs to U.S., at Zocalo Square in downtown Mexico City, Mexico March 9, 2025. REUTERS/Toya Sarno Jordan
"These are people of faith," said Stensrud, who leads Christian women on trips to meet migrants, aid workers and Border Patrol at the border. "These are people who are saying, 'I am trusting in God to bring me to a place where there are brothers and sisters in Christ.'"
The heightened public exposure of those competing for the prestigious posts has sparked fears that the candidates will be easy targets.
Officially, the Mexican government sued American gun manufacturers, blaming them for “aiding and abetting” the trafficking of firearms to drug cartels. But its real beef is with the Second Amendment, which prohibits the sort of sweeping gun restrictions that Mexican officials think public safety requires.
President Trump has imposed steep tariffs on Canada, China, and Mexico in the name of curbing fentanyl flows into the United States. In reality, supplies of the drug—and related deaths—have sharply