'Money has never interested me': Mexican President shows near empty wallet

Mexico's President has just $23,000 in the bank and virtually no other assets.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador says money has never interested him.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador says money has never interested him. Source: AAP

Mexico's austerity-crusader President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said Friday his official declaration contained virtually no assets, showing his nearly empty wallet to reporters as evidence.

Lopez Obrador, an anti-establishment leftist who took office last month, has delighted supporters - but also fueled criticism - with his aggressive austerity measures.

They include slashing his own salary, disbanding the presidential security detail and flying commercial airlines for official trips.

"Money has never interested me. I fight for ideals, for principles. Although I would also clarify, to avoid offending anyone, that not all rich people are evil," he said at his daily press conference.

Lopez Obrador, 65, said his asset declaration included two bank accounts with about $23,000 in them, no credit card, no checking account and no vehicles.
Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said not all rich people are evil.
Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said not all rich people are evil. Source: AAP
He said his only real estate was his modest ranch in southern Mexico, which is not even his, since he has signed the deed over to his sons.

His wife, journalist and writer Beatriz Gutierrez, meanwhile declared three bank accounts with a total of around $72,000, three vehicles, an apartment, a house and two tracts of land, he said.

To prove his point, he showed the press his wallet, which contained just 200 pesos (about $10) and a two-dollar bill he said was given to him as a good-luck charm by a Mexican living in the United States.

However, the president - widely known by his initials, AMLO - has already landed in hot water with some aspects of his austerity push.

His decision to cancel a new $13-billion airport for Mexico City that was one-third built caused investor jitters and a stock-market rout.

And when he moved to cut the pay of any public employee earning more than his own newly reduced salary of about $5,500 a month, it triggered a flood of lawsuits, most recently from the central bank, which questioned whether the measure was constitutional.


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Source: AFP, SBS


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