On My Whistle: Mexico Braces for World Cup Conflict – Soberanía 109

In episode 110 of Soberanía, hosts José Luis Granados Ceja and Kurt Hackbarth open with an in-depth look at the ongoing teachers’ protest in Mexico City. The hosts distinguish between the legitimate demands of the CNTE (including the reversal of a 2007 pension privatization) and the government’s claim that violent tactics are being used to project an image of chaos ahead of the World Cup. They note that while the union has protested every government regardless of party, the current context, with FIFA demanding cosmetic works and Ricardo Salinas Pliego calling for radical action, has created a volatile mix.

Next, they turn to a rare good news story: Mexico’s first domestically produced electric vehicle, the Olinia. Priced at 150,000 pesos (about $8,600), the small car is designed for specific Mexican urban needs — school runs, market trips, mobility for people with disabilities — not for export or highway competition. The hosts explain how the vehicle fits into Plan Mexico’s broader goal of building national industrial capacity and reducing dependence on imports, while also potentially improving Mexico City’s air quality.

The episode then examines the American Society gala, a who’s-who of opposition figures who gathered to hear a proposal for a “crime-fighting treaty” with the U.S. While Ambassador Ron Johnson was a no-show, the hosts note the event’s corporatist structure and its alignment with the Trump administration’s push for direct U.S. military intervention in Mexico.

Losers and Haters takes aim at cartoonist Paco Calderón, whose attempt to defend Maru Campos only highlighted the opposition’s inability to maintain a consistent narrative about the Chihuahua CIA scandal, two months later and they still can’t agree on whether she collaborated with U.S. agencies or not.