Groups Gather In Mexico City To Watch US Presidential Debate

By Rodrigo Cervantes
September 27, 2016
Rodrigo Cervantes
Isabel Duque has double nationality and volunteered to register voters and sell Clinton T-shirts and buttons.
Rodrigo Cervantes
César Flores and José Manuel Ruiz from Mexico City (front) and Dania Hernández from Mexico with Christian Malerbakken from Norway (secod row) watched the presidential debate at Pinche Gringo BBQ restaurant in Mexico City.
Rodrigo Cervantes
Verónica Reyes from Chicago has lived for two and a half years in Mexico City and is part of Democrats Abroad.
Rodrigo Cervantes
Sharon Test grew up in Prescott, Arizona, but married a Mexican citizen and has lived in Mexico since 1972.
Rodrigo Cervantes
American expats and people interested in U.S. politics gathered at Pinche Gringo restaurant in Mexico City to watch the debate.

MEXICO CITY — Like in the United States, groups gathered in Mexico City for presidential debate watch parties.

One of them was at an American-style barbecue joint. The customers were encouraged to toast every time the word Mexico was mentioned during the debate.

Maybe not a lot of toasts, since the country was scarcely mentioned, but there were plenty of people who showed up to watch the debate between Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump.

It was a gathering open to the public, organized by Democrats Abroad. There were American expats, but also people from other countries — including England and Norway — and Mexican citizens.

César Flores, a Mexican lawyer, was one of them. And although he cannot vote, he was proudly wearing a Clinton T-shirt.

For him, the Democrat candidate won the first debate of a historic election.

“I believe this is an important election, not only for the future of the United States, it is the future of the world,” Flores said.

Sharon Test also attended the event. She grew up in Prescott, Arizona, and has lived in Mexico since 1972. She married a Mexican citizen and adopted a Mexican child, who now is an adult and lives in North Carolina.

And who won the debate for this Arizonan expat?

“I don’t believe in winning or losing a debate,” she said.

However, Test said that her daughter has encouraged her to go to south Phoenix to get the Mexican-American vote and stop Donald Trump.

Across town, others felt differently. Republicans Abroad held their own event, but it was a private gathering.

For Test, what truly matters is that the American people vote, get informed and learn more about other places and cultures.

“The world is so interconnected now — and it wasn’t 50 years ago — that, if Americans don’t understand other countries, they are not gonna be able to live peacefully in the world,” Test said.

Verónica Reyes from Chicago has lived in Mexico City for almost three years. She was one of the organizers of the debate watch party and said that what is important, regardless of the political stands, is to keep Americans together in the democratic process, even when they have to live abroad.

And as an American expat in Mexico, she expects that the next president of the United States keeps in mind the relationship between both nations.

“It would be very important to keep our commercial exchange, to really focus on immigration reform and to keep the doors open, regardless of who wins: we are now a global community,” she said.