Trump names conservative lawyer as Mexico ambassador

AFP  |  Washington 

has nominated a veteran as his first to Mexico, a delicate role in representing a US leader set on building a wall between the countries.

He has no diplomatic experience but studied at and speaks Spanish.

His father, George Landau, was a longtime US policymaker in who served as to Chile, and

Trump announced Landau, who requires confirmation by the Senate, in a statement released late Monday. Numerous key diplomatic posts remain empty more than two years into Trump's tenure.

The has been without an in City since May, when Roberta Jacobson, who was named by Barack Obama, resigned.

She had initially decided to stay on after Trump's election to ensure continuity but complained of chaotic decision-making.

In an interview with after she quit, Jacobson called Trump's hard line on immigration "un-American" and warned it could reduce US standing in the region.

Trump rose to power on a staunchly anti-immigration platform, calling some Mexican immigrants rapists and making his signature issue the construction of a wall on the border which he told campaign rallies that would fund.

Trump triggered a shutdown of the government and issued his first veto to seek the building of the wall, with his administration tacitly acknowledging that will not pay for it.

Mexico's new leftist president, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, has taken a low-key approach with Trump despite their strong ideological differences.

He has agreed to keep migrants fleeing troubled inside Mexico as they apply for asylum in the United States, a break with standard practice as he seeks to avoid public spats with Trump.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, March 19 2019. 11:45 IST