The World Cup means slashed wages and displacement for some of the Mexico City’s poor
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Montserrat Fuentes stands on the same street corner where she has worked for 20 years. But the sex worker’s normal rush of clients every Friday night is nowhere to be seen. Instead, the busy Mexico City throughway where some 2,500 sex workers make their living is lined with construction, part of larger preparations in the Mexican capital leading up to the 2026 FIFA World Cup over the summer. Fuentes, 42, and others say they have seen their earnings slashed by government projects meant to clean up swathes of the city before opening its arms to sports fans from across the world. Street vendors also say they are being pushed out and don’t know what will be left for them after...

