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Pena Nieto pledged to announce another reform plan later Sunday, this one to rework the country's inefficient tax system. Many Mexicans work under the table or avoid paying any taxes at all, and the tax code is littered with loopholes for large corporations. Lopez Obrador claimed Pena Nieto wants to tax Mexicans more to replace revenue lost because some oil income, a large part of the federal government's revenues, would go to private companies under the proposed oil overhaul. Pena Nieto's PRI party brushes off the criticisms. "There are people who think that repeating lies will make them the truth, to distort the real aims of the reform," PRI Sen. Ana Lilia Herrera said. "We have oil and gas in deep water, but we don't have the cutting-edge technology to take advantage of them. The reform will help make it easier to get at them, to benefit Mexicans, of course." Pena Nieto's administration has blanketed the airwaves with ads saying he doesn't plan to privatize or sell Pemex. But people like Chavez remain wary. "They know how to manipulate people very well," she said of Pena Nieto's party, which ruled Mexico without interruption from 1929 to 2000.
[Associated
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