In June 2019, Donald Trump threatened Mexico with a series of punitive trade tariffs. The then- president backed off soon after, claiming that he’d secured a series of policy victories as a result of his ultimatum toward the U.S. neighbor.
Indeed, at the time, the Republican seemed eager to pat himself on the back, claiming that Mexico, desperate to avoid tariffs, had agreed to impose dramatic new curbs on immigrants trying to reach American soil, as well as vowing to “immediately begin buying large quantities of agricultural product” from American farmers. Just as notably, Trump said the bilateral agreement included secret benefits that he wasn’t prepared to divulge.
A closer look, however, shredded the entire story. Mexico hadn’t agreed to new curbs on immigrants; there were no new agricultural purchases; and when Mexico’s foreign minister was asked about the secret benefits that Trump referred to, he said he didn’t have the foggiest idea what the American president was talking about.
By all appearances, the Republican backed himself into a corner, pushing a tariff threat that he didn’t actually want to implement. So, as a face-saving move, Trump made up an illusory deal — assuming, of course, that the public wouldn’t know the difference — in order to give himself an excuse to back away from a threat he hadn’t fully thought through in the first place.
More than five years later, something similar appears to have happened. NBC News reported:
In what looks like a case of “he said, she said,” President-elect Donald Trump and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum appear to have starkly different recollections of a conversation that covered the hot-button issue of migration. After the phone chat late Wednesday, Trump wrote on social media that the Mexican leader had agreed to stop immigration through Mexico and to the United States.
Some context is in order. Seven days ago, the Republican president-elect vowed to impose new trade tariffs on imported goods from each of the United States’ three largest trading partners. Trump specifically raised the prospect of slapping a 25% tariff on “ALL products” from Mexico — adding that the policy would remain in place until he’s satisfied that “Drugs” and “all Illegal Aliens” are no longer reaching American soil.
Two days later, Trump published an item to his social media platform, claiming there’d been a breakthrough of sorts: Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, he said, “agreed to stop Migration through Mexico, and into the United States, effectively closing our Southern Border.”
Sheinbaum soon after issued a statement saying largely the opposite, denying a major policy shift, and making clear that her country has no interest in closing the border.








