Trump says he will change the name of the Gulf of Mexico. Can he do
that?
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[January 08, 2025]
By MEG KINNARD
President-elect Donald Trump said Tuesday that he would move to try to
rename the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America,” a name he said has a
“beautiful ring to it.”
It's his latest suggestion to redraw the map of the Western Hemisphere.
Trump has repeatedly referred to Canada as the “51st State,” demanded
that Denmark consider ceding Greenland, and called for Panama to return
the Panama Canal.
Here's a look at his comment and what goes into a name.
Why is Trump talking about renaming the Gulf of Mexico?
Since his first run for the White House in 2016, Trump has repeatedly
clashed with Mexico over a number of issues, including border security
and the imposition of tariffs on imported goods. He vowed then to build
a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and make Mexico pay for it. The U.S.
ultimately constructed or refurbished about 450 miles of wall during his
first term.
The Gulf of Mexico is often referred to as the United States' “Third
Coast” due to its coastline across five southeastern states. Mexicans
use a Spanish version of the same name for the gulf: “El Golfo de
México.”
Americans and Mexicans diverge on what to call another key body of
water, the river that forms the border between Texas and the Mexican
states of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas. Americans call
it the Rio Grande; Mexicans call it the Rio Bravo.
Can Trump change the name of the Gulf of Mexico?
Maybe, but it's not a unilateral decision, and other countries don't
have to go along.
The International Hydrographic Organization — of which both the United
States and Mexico are members — works to ensure all the world’s seas,
oceans and navigable waters are surveyed and charted uniformly, and also
names some of them. There are instances where countries refer to the
same body of water or landmark by different names in their own
documentation.
It can be easier when a landmark or body of water is within a country's
boundaries. In 2015, then-President Barack Obama approved an order from
the Department of Interior to rename Mount McKinley — the highest peak
in North America — to Denali, a move that Trump has also said he wants
to reverse.
Just after Trump's comments on Tuesday, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of
Georgia said during an interview with podcaster Benny Johnson that she
would direct her staff to draft legislation to change the name of the
Gulf of Mexico, a move she said would take care of funding for new maps
and administrative policy materials throughout the federal government.
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President-elect Donald Trump walks from the podium after a news
conference at Mar-a-Lago, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025, in Palm Beach, Fla.
(AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
How did the Gulf of Mexico get its name?
The body of water has been depicted with that name for more than
four centuries, an original determination believed to have been
taken from a Native American city of “Mexico.”
Has renaming the Gulf of Mexico come up before?
Yes. In 2012, a member of the Mississippi Legislature proposed a
bill to rename portions of the gulf that touch that state's beaches
“Gulf of America,” a move the bill author later referred to as a
“joke.” That bill, which was referred to a committee, did not pass.
Two years earlier, comedian Stephen Colbert had joked on his show
that, following the massive Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf
of Mexico, it should be renamed “Gulf of America” because, "We broke
it, we bought it.”
Are there other international disputes over the names of places?
There's a long-running dispute over the name of the Sea of Japan
among Japan, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, with South Korea
arguing that the current name wasn't commonly used until Korea was
under Japanese rule. At an International Hydrographic Organization
meeting in 2020, member states agreed on a plan to replace names
with numerical identifiers and develop a new digital standard for
modern geographic information systems.
The Persian Gulf has been widely known by that name since the 16th
century, although usage of “Gulf” and “Arabian Gulf” is dominant in
many countries in the Middle East. The government of Iran threatened
to sue Google in 2012 over the company's decision not to label the
body of water at all on its maps.
There have been other conversations about bodies of water, including
from Trump’s 2016 opponent. According to materials revealed by
WikiLeaks in a hack of her campaign chairman’s personal account,
former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2013 told an audience
that, by China’s logic that it claimed nearly the entirety of the
South China Sea, then the U.S. after World War II could have labeled
the Pacific Ocean the “American Sea.”
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