Judiciary Trust Extinction Passes Chamber of Deputies
If the initiative passes the Mexican Senate, the Judicial Branch of the Federation will be left with just one trust
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If the initiative passes the Mexican Senate, the Judicial Branch of the Federation will be left with just one trust
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With the Chihuahua suit resolved, the Supreme Court Justice of the Nation is now set to decide on the state of Coahuila’s pending suit over the free textbooks
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Hundreds of education specialists have protested the publication and distribution of the free textbooks, claiming the materials indoctrinate children into the government’s ideologies and prevent them from developing necessary skills for adult life
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The opposition electoral coalition will also file a series of amparos against the textbooks as well as hold a public forum on the subject alongside experts, teachers and students’ parents
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A proposed extraordinary session of the Mexican Senate to appoint new commissioners to the National Institute of Transparency could be the make-or-break factor in resolving the institute’s months-long case backlog
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Veracruz Governor Cuitláhuac García’s rally against Mexico’s Supreme Court included distasteful displays against Supreme Court Chief Justice Norma Piña, actions later applauded by López Obrador
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Following the Mexican Supreme Court’s invalidation of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s controversial Plan B electoral reform, the federal executive aims to seek revenge against the court by means of public referendum
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López Obrador’s outrage against the Supreme Court justice’s invalidation of his Plan B electoral reform has put a new enemy in his sights: the Supreme Court itself
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Following the Mexican Supreme Court’s decision to invalidate the first part of López Obrador’s Plan B electoral reform due to violations of the legislative process, López Obrador announced another sweeping electoral reform — known as Plan C — to the public
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While Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador pivoted from his defunct constitutional electoral reform to change some of Mexico’s basic electoral laws, purported violations of the legislative process during Plan B’s passage has put the reform’s constitutionality in question at the Supreme Court
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