Claudia Sheinbaum, the former mayor of Mexico City, will become Mexico’s first female president. Sheinbaum has pledged to be a continuation of her predecessor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador. WSJ’s José de Córdoba explains the two politicians’ close ties, and what her administration could mean for Mexico-U.S. relations.
Further Reading:
- Claudia Sheinbaum Elected as Mexico’s First Female President
- The Most Dangerous Job in Mexican Politics: Running for Mayor
Further Listening:
- Texas Took On Border Security. Is It Working?
- When the Drug Cartel Takes Over
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
China Wants More Babies. Many Women Are Saying No.
Behind the Campaign to Push Harvard’s President Out
One Company’s Quest to Burst Apple’s Blue Bubble Texts
'The Ultimate Confidence Trickster': The Double Life of a Tech Exec
The Taco Tuesday Fight Is Over
Mariah Carey on the Rise of Her Christmas Anthem
Inside an iPhone Heist
What Happened to GM’s All-Electric Bet?
Why an AI Pioneer Is Worried
Who's Keeping Zombie Malls Alive?
The Wonderful Accident Behind a Christmas Classic
Actors Recorded Videos for ‘Vladimir.’ It Turned Into Russian Propaganda.
The Mysterious CEO Leading Shein to an IPO
Janet Yellen on Inflation and the U.S. Economy
Big Donors Clash with Universities Over Antisemitism, Free Speech
Artificial: Episode 2, Selling Out
Does Nikki Haley Have a Chance At Beating Trump?
Meta Is Struggling to Boot Pedophiles Off Facebook and Instagram
Why Goldman Sachs and Apple Weren't Happily Ever After
Why Some Opioid Victims Are Challenging Purdue’s Settlement
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
WSJ What’s News
WSJ Your Money Briefing
WSJ Opinion: Potomac Watch
The Daily
Today, Explained