President Sheinbaum’s Address on the 115th Anniversary of the Mexican Revolution
Remarks delivered by Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum in the Zócalo: the Plaza de la Constitución in Mexico City.
Remarks delivered by Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum in the Zócalo: the Plaza de la Constitución in Mexico City.
Tens of protestors, outnumbered two to one by journalists and street vendors, gathered for a dismal march in Mexico City. A planned mobilization at UNAM, where hundreds of thousands of Gen-Z members attend school, drew precisely zero protestors.
An interview with Aarón Ortiz Santos of the Council of Mexican Migrant Federations and Organizations.
The unsuccessful meeting arose after the government agreed to it to end a November 12th sugarcane grower blockade in Mexico City.
Thousands of trade unionists gathered outside Mexico’s Chamber of Deputies to deliver the message that the union movement will not allow the reform to be diluted or for the business sector to impose conditions that limit its scope.
The ruling comes a week after the Court definitively ratified seven other tax debts totaling more than 48 billion against ultra-right winger Ricardo Salinas Pliego’s conglomerate.
Today, right-wing experiences are diverse, with little homogeneity in economic programs, appealing to sectors extending beyond large financiers & the “middle classes.” However, what is most striking about them is the absence of a vision for the future.
President Sheinbaum’s daily press conference, with comments on 7 years of the Fourth Transformation, FDI, PAN & the November 15th “gen-z” march, APEC 2028, and a supercomputer.
The truth behind what was billed as a “youth” march and instead was a by-the-book, attempt at astroturfed destablization.
Mexico’s imports are equivalent to 48% of agricultural production, resulting in a year-on-year loss of food sovereignty and a greater dependence on capital inflows which benefits the financial sector at the expense of national public & private sectors.