Governing Amid Bullets – A Mexican Mayor’s War Against the Cartels

In Uruapan, the heart of Mexico’s multibillion-dollar avocado industry, Mayor Carlos Manzo (40) is waging a personal war against the drug cartels that dominate Michoacán, the state with the highest number of assassinated mayors in the country. Since taking office in September 2024, he has openly challenged criminal groups that extort avocado producers and terrorize civilians — an act of defiance that has made him one of the most exposed local leaders in Mexico.

Uruapan sits less than 60 miles from the border with Jalisco, in a corridor fought over by cartels seeking control of Pacific ports used to traffic precursor chemicals from China, which feed the fentanyl trade reaching the United States. Amid Donald Trump’s renewed calls for military action against Mexican cartels and the cautious response of President Claudia Sheinbaum, Manzo’s fight reflects both the courage and the limits of local resistance in Mexico’s broader security crisis.

Despite constant death threats, he personally joins daily patrols with police and soldiers through Uruapan’s most violent neighborhoods. Recently, he rushed to the scene of a gunfight near the Purépecha community of Tiamba, where deserted avocado orchards have become a frontline of cartel control.

The pitch is accompanied by photographs from a recent trip to Michoacán, including images of a patrol with Mayor Manzo and self-defense (autodefensa) groups around Uruapan. The visuals and story together reveal the region’s volatility and the fragility of governance amid cartel violence.

This piece offers a ground-level view of what it means to govern under siege in Mexico, at a moment when U.S.–Mexico relations over drugs, security, and sovereignty are once again at the center of American political debate.