Mexico’s Socialist Solidarity Blunder: Propping Up Cuba’s Dying Communist Regime Will Cost Jobs, Sovereignty, and Common Sense
By Hotspotnews
In a move that reeks of outdated leftist ideology, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum announced this week that her government is “exploring different schemes” to resume oil shipments to communist Cuba—despite explicit threats of American tariffs and economic retaliation from President Trump. This isn’t humanitarian aid. It’s a deliberate subsidy to a bankrupt dictatorship that has spent 67 years proving the utter failure of Marxism. Sheinbaum dresses it up as “sovereignty” and concern for blackouts, but the real agenda is clear: ideological kinship with a regime that treats its people like prisoners in a failed experiment.
Let’s be blunt about why this is happening. Cuba is in freefall. After Venezuela’s socialist collapse cut off its oil lifeline, the island has endured rolling blackouts lasting days, hospitals without power, rotting food supplies, and paralyzed transportation. Sheinbaum claims Mexico is simply stepping in to prevent a “humanitarian crisis.” Nice try. The real crisis is communism itself—a system that nationalized everything, destroyed private property, crushed incentives, and turned one of the hemisphere’s richest islands into a beggar state reliant on foreign handouts. Mexico paused these shipments in January precisely because Trump’s executive order made it clear: keep fueling Castro’s heirs and face consequences. Now Sheinbaum, a proud leftist heir to AMLO’s socialist populism, is testing how far she can push Washington.
The consequences for Mexico will be swift and painful. America is Mexico’s largest trading partner by far—roughly 80 percent of Mexican exports head north. Trump has already signaled that any resumption of oil flows will trigger targeted tariffs on Mexican autos, electronics, agriculture, and more. The USMCA renegotiation is looming; this stunt gives Washington every justification to rewrite the deal in America’s favor. Mexican factories will lay off workers, farmers will lose markets, and ordinary citizens will pay higher prices—all so their president can play revolutionary hero for a regime most Cubans risk their lives to escape. Meanwhile, U.S.-Mexico cooperation on border security, fentanyl trafficking, and migration—already strained—will deteriorate further. Trump doesn’t bluff on sovereignty. Mexico is about to learn that lesson the hard way.
For Cuba, the shipments would merely延 the inevitable. A few thousand barrels a day might keep a few lights on and a few buses running, but they won’t fix the rot at the core. After decades of Soviet subsidies, then Venezuelan ones, and now this desperate Mexican bailout, the pattern is identical: communist central planning produces shortages, corruption, and collapse every single time. Doctors and engineers flee to capitalist countries where their skills are rewarded. The state prints worthless pesos while people scramble for dollars on the black market. Hospitals that once boasted “world-class” care now beg for diesel to run generators. This isn’t solidarity—it’s enabling a zombie economy that survives only by cannibalizing its own future and repressing dissent.
Supporting communism has never been noble; it has always been a catastrophic mistake. Cuba proves it in real time. The 1959 revolution promised equality and justice. It delivered poverty, political prisons, and mass exodus. Private farms were seized and turned into collective failures. Industries were nationalized into inefficiency. Incentives vanished—why innovate or work hard when the state takes everything and gives back crumbs? Every time a donor tires of the charade (the Soviets in 1991, Venezuela recently), the lights go out and the propaganda machine cranks up blame toward “the embargo.” Never mind that the embargo is America’s perfectly rational refusal to bankroll tyranny. Never mind that capitalist countries like Chile, South Korea, and even parts of Eastern Europe left socialism behind and exploded with growth. Cuba chose the opposite path and became the cautionary tale.
Mexico should know better. Its own flirtations with heavy state control—bloated Pemex monopolies, price controls, and populist spending—have brought corruption scandals and energy insecurity at home. Yet here is Sheinbaum, virtue-signaling with other people’s oil while Mexican families face their own challenges. This isn’t sovereignty; it’s suicidal solidarity with a proven loser. True sovereignty would mean rejecting failed 20th-century ideologies and embracing the free-market principles that lifted billions out of poverty worldwide.
President Trump is right to draw the line. The United States has no obligation to tolerate neighbors subsidizing America’s enemies. The Cuban people deserve better than endless blackouts and empty slogans—they deserve the dignity of property rights, free enterprise, and accountable government. Mexico deserves better leadership than one that gambles its economic lifeline on Marxist nostalgia.
Sheinbaum’s decision isn’t compassion. It’s a textbook case of ideological blindness with a steep price tag. When the tariffs hit, when factories slow, and when Cubans still flee on rafts, remember: this is what happens when governments choose communism over common sense. The free world is watching—and the bill is coming due.


