Soberanía 28: Mexico’s January 6th and Other Acts of Extremism
From storming the Senate Chamber to attacking elected officials out in public, supporters of the political right in Mexico are increasingly turning to extreme forms of protest.
From storming the Senate Chamber to attacking elected officials out in public, supporters of the political right in Mexico are increasingly turning to extreme forms of protest.
Our weekly roundup of press coverage in & of Mexico, including Indigenous and Afro-Mexican reform, US initiates Sinaloa violence, CIA agent rapist, Noroña & friendship with China, Mexico snubs NATO puppet Zelensky
AMLO Victory on Judicial Reform Triggers Opposition
Our weekly roundup of press coverage in & of Mexico, including judicial reform, China-Mexican relations and (as usual) gringo interference.
“It is the Time of Women” proclaims Claudia: her own election is symbolic of a much broader change.
What does Mexico’s constitutional reform of the judiciary actually intend to accomplish?
Mexico’s political institutions reflect majority opinion; Morena is in power because the country’s political system allows third parties to grow (it’s only ten years old) and because most people support its policies, including democratizing the judiciary.
Our weekly roundup of press coverage in & of Mexico, including AMLO’s final informe, US corps drying up Mexico, judicial reform, nearshoring jitters, child labor declining, and violence in Chiapas.
Appearance on Class, the official podcast of the National Political Education Committee of the Democratic Socialists of America.
Hackbarth & Granados Ceja discuss AMLO’s final days in office and the fight to continue to build from the victories of MORENA.