Mexican mayor who fought drug cartels is slain on Day of the Dead
MEXICO CITYΒ βΒ Carlos Manzo was famous in Mexico for saying what few other politicians would: That cartels operated with impunity and needed to be confronted with brute force. The mayor of a city in an avocado-growing region beset by crime and violence, Manzo suggested authorities should beat criminals into submission β or simply kill them.
It was a provocative message that resonated in some sectors of a country long afflicted by drug war bloodshed. Many here viewed Manzo, with his trademark white cowboy hat, as a hero.
But his iron fist rhetoric and criticism of the federal governmentβs security strategy also earned him enemies. Manzo acknowledged as much, saying he knew he could be targeted by organized crime. βI donβt want to be just another murdered mayor,β he said last month. βBut it is important not to let fear control us.β
Manzo, 40, was gunned down Saturday night as he presided over a public celebration of Day of the Dead in a central square in Uruapan, a city of 300,000 in the western state of MichoacΓ‘n. One suspected gunman was killed and two others arrested.
The slaying, captured on video, provoked outcry throughout Mexico and in Washington.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, with whom Manzo often sparred on issues of security, mourned an βirreparable loss.β U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau posted a photograph of Manzo smiling and holding his young son just moments before the attack. βThe U.S. stands ready to deepen security cooperation with Mexico to wipe out organized crime,β Landau wrote.
Manzo was a part of a new wave of leaders throughout the Americas who have called for a hard line against criminals.
Itβs a club that includes President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador, who has locked up tens of thousands of people accused of gang ties, with little to no due process, and President Trump, who has pushed a more militaristic approach to combating cartels, saying the U.S. should βwage warβ on drug traffickers.
The U.S. military has killed 65 people in recent months who it alleges were smuggling drugs in the Caribbean and the Pacific, including several attacks off Mexicoβs coastline. Trump administration leaders have warned of the possibility of U.S. attacks on cartel targets on Mexican soil.
Calls for a violent crackdown on organized crime are at odds with the security strategy embraced by Sheinbaum and her predecessor, AndrΓ©s Manuel LΓ³pez Obrador. Both emphasized the need to address root causes of violence, including poverty and social disintegration.
LΓ³pez Obrador, especially, vowed to break with the confrontational approaches of past Mexican administrations, whose military operations he said failed to weaken cartels and only fueled violence. What Mexico needed, LΓ³pez Obrador often said, was βhugs, not bullets.β
Manzo β who got his start in politics as a member of LΓ³pez Obrador and Sheinbaumβs Morena party but later became an independent β fiercely criticized that mantra.
βHugs … are for Mexicans who live in extreme poverty,β Manzo said. βCriminals, assassins … they deserve beatings and the full force of the Mexican state.β He encouraged police officers in Uruapan to use lethal force against criminals who resist arrest.
The mayor frequently criticized Sheinbaum for not doing more to confront cartels, even though there has been a decrease in homicides and an uptick in drug seizures and arrests since she took office. Sheinbaum has said that security in Mexico depends on reinforcing the rule of law, including giving suspects a fair trial.
The son of a community activist, Manzo became mayor of Uruapan in 2024. The city has been the site of some of Mexicoβs worst drug war atrocities β kidnappings, bombings, bodies hung from highway overpasses β as a volatile mix of criminal groups battle for control of trafficking routes and profits from the lucrative avocado industry.
Manzo appeared Saturday with his family at a crowded public event in Uruapanβs central plaza to mark the Day of the Dead holiday. He posed for photographs with fans and broadcast the candle-lighting event live on social media, sending βblessings to all.β
When a journalist asked about security at the event, Manzo responded: βThere is a presence from different levels of government. We hope everything goes well, is peaceful, and that you enjoy the evening.β
Minutes later, shots β then screams β rang out. Manzo lay on the ground, bleeding. Nearby lay his white cowboy hat.
Security consultant David Saucedo, who said Manzo was accompanied at the event by local police and 14 members of Mexicoβs national guard, described the killing as a βkamikaze attack,β saying it was clear the shooter would be killed.
Manzo, Saucedo said, had been βbrave but recklessβ in his quest to confront organized crime. βCarlos lacked the human, financial, and material resources to defeat the cartels,β Saucedo said. His killing βmakes it clear that even with political will, defeating the cartels at the municipal level is an impossible mission.β
The mayorβs slaying was the latest in a string of violent incidents in MichoacΓ‘n. Last month, officials announced they had discovered the body of Bernardo Bravo ManrΓquez, the head of a lime growers association who had repeatedly denounced extortion demands against agricultural producers.
Cecilia SΓ‘nchez Vidal in The Timesβ Mexico City bureau contributed to this report.