Brugada Makes 13,000 Mexico City Public Workers Permanent
Mexico City’s Head of government celebrated the step as an act of labor justice: workers will now have social security, benefits, and peace of mind of formal employment.
Mexico City’s Head of government celebrated the step as an act of labor justice: workers will now have social security, benefits, and peace of mind of formal employment.
The President did not confirm whether US Secretary of State Rubio was open to the request.
Recipients can receive up to three monthly payments of 3,439 pesos.
An hour and a half before the legal deadline, the Secretary of the Treasury, Édgar Amador Zamora, delivered the 2026 economic package to the Chamber of Deputies tonight.
A Oaxaca state official distanced herself from the purchase, stating it was the responsibility of Mexico’s National Defense Secretariat.
Mayor Alessandra Rojo de la Vega prefers making headlines with right wing stunts like illegally removing sculptures of Fidel Castro & Che Guevara.
The President promised the recovery of the the Coahuila steelworks would prioritize justice and payment for workers first, over creditors.
An elite police group formed by Chiapas’ state government “intimidates the population, raids & invades properties.”
The Forum Against Gentrification warned that the City’s Attorney General is fabricating criminal pretexts to justify evictions which hand over buildings for Airbnb developments, warehouses, and real estate speculation.
Our weekly roundup of Mexican political stories in the English and Spanish language press, including Rubio’s visit, no progress on 40 hour workweek, Sheinbaum informa, Taibo II, minimum wage increases, US military & the drug trade, Monroe Doctrine, & Morena’s sectional committees.