Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In April 2023, Brazil's Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira paid a visit to Mexico to participate in the V meeting of the Mexico-Brazil Binational Commission and celebrated the centenary of the opening of the Brazilian embassy in Mexico. [4] In October 2024, President da Silva travelled to Mexico to attend the inauguration of President Claudia ...
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, also known as Itamaraty, is the government department responsible for advising the President and conducting Brazil's foreign relations with other countries and international bodies. Itamaraty's scope includes political, commercial, economic, financial, cultural and consular relations, areas in which it performs ...
After the War of Independence, the relations of Mexico were focused primarily on the United States, its northern neighbor, largest trading partner, [4] and the most powerful actor in hemispheric and world affairs. [5] Once the order was reestablished, its foreign policy was built under hemispheric prestige in subsequent decades.
Brazilian and Mexican authorities said on Monday they see the need to revise and expand their current trade agreements, in a push to strengthen the ties between the two largest economies in Latin ...
Leaders in Mexico, Brazil, Ecuador, Chile, El Salvador and other countries in the region have brought armies back into politics and government. That's dangerous.
Mexico’s foreign policy is headed toward greater radicalization. The clues have been clear. Newly inaugurated President Claudia Sheinbaum has restricted the diplomatic work of the U.S ...
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MRE; Portuguese: Ministério das Relações Exteriores; literally: Ministry of External Relations) conducts Brazil's foreign relations with other countries. It is commonly referred to in Brazilian media and diplomatic jargon as Itamaraty , after the palace which houses the ministry (originally in Rio de Janeiro ...
Investor confidence in Mexico has been shaken recently by controversial reforms to the energy sector and the judiciary, and the government is eager to regain the trust of foreign companies.