Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Mexican car auction
The auction will help upturn Mexico’s ‘reverse Robin Hood’ system, officials say. Photograph: Pedro Pardo/AFP/Getty Images
The auction will help upturn Mexico’s ‘reverse Robin Hood’ system, officials say. Photograph: Pedro Pardo/AFP/Getty Images

Mexico sells off cars from corrupt rich to give to the poor

This article is more than 4 years old

Funds from auction of 82 cars worth total of £1m will go to deprived communities

Dozens of luxury cars seized from sticky-fingered politicians and mobsters will go under the hammer this weekend as part of a populist anti-corruption crusade being waged by Mexico’s leftist president.

Andrés Manuel López Obrador has vowed that proceeds from Sunday’s auction will be channelled into social programmes and deprived communities.

“We invite everyone to take part,” said López Obrador, who took office in December and is a friend of the UK Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn. “Everything that is confiscated [from criminals] will be handed back to the communities, above all the country’s poor communities.”

A soldier inspects a Jeep, one of the vehicles to be auctioned on Sunday. Photograph: Pedro Pardo/AFP/Getty Images

Ricardo Rodríguez Vargas, the director of the newly created Institute to Return Stolen Goods to the People, said 82 vehicles with a combined valuation of nearly £1m would be up for grabs on Sunday.

They include a £61,000 Lamborghini Murciélago, a £50,000 Ford Shelby, a red Corvette, a 2009 Hummer, a collection of bulletproof SUVs and, for the less extravagant bidder, a 29-year-old Volkswagen Beetle.

The auction is being held at Los Pinos, a former presidential residence in Mexico City recently converted into a public cultural centre by López Obrador.

The cars for sale include a Lamborghini Murciélago and three Porsches. Photograph: Mario Guzman/EPA

Vargas described the auction as an attempt to end Mexico’s “reverse Robin Hood” system by which “things were taken away from the people and given to the corrupt”. He said: “Not any more. Now, the order is to return these things to the people – who are the legitimate owners – in a quick, clear [and] transparent manner.”

Two other auctions – of luxury homes and jewellery – will be held in the coming weeks.

A Ford Mustang appears to have caught this woman’s eye. Photograph: Pedro Pardo/AFP/Getty Images

López Obrador’s pledge to “purify” Mexican politics has enthused corruption-weary voters who handed him a landslide victory last July. Six months into his six-year term, polls give him an approval rating of about 70%.

But some critics see Sunday’s auction as little more than a diversion and say there is little substance to López Obrador’s vows to eradicate corruption. “Bread and circuses,” an opposition senator, Javier Lozano, tweeted alongside a photograph of one of the auction’s Lamborghinis.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Kidnappers free two of three journalists taken in Mexico, group says

  • Acapulco death toll rises to 43 after Hurricane Otis batters resort city

  • Hurricane Otis: before and after footage shows scale of destruction in Mexico's Acapulco – video

  • Clean-up and damage assessments begin after Hurricane Otis rips through Mexico

  • Acapulco: drone footage shows trail of destruction left by Hurricane Otis – video

  • Hurricane Otis hits Mexico and continues with category 5 intensity

  • At least 27 dead after Hurricane Otis smashes into Mexico’s Pacific coast

  • Hurricane Otis: storm strengthens to Category 5 in a matter of hours as it nears Mexico

  • As Hurricane Hilary prepares to land, California and Mexico brace for impact

  • Mexican president bemoans ‘rude’ US fentanyl pressure in plea to Xi Jinping

Most viewed

Most viewed