Tag Archives: Supreme Court

Landau Calls Siege on US Capitol ‘Unacceptable’

By THE PULSE NEWS MEXICO STAFF U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Christopher Landau said Thursday, Jan. 7, that the assault on the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C. was “unacceptable.” “There is a clear line between political protest and dissidence, on one hand, and violence and intimidation, on the other,” Landau said on his official government Twitter account. “The events that

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The View from the North: RBG’s Death Won’t Help Biden

By SILVIO CANTO, JR. Politics aside, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (RBG) was an extraordinary woman.  She dedicated her life to the pursuit of jurisprudence and carried on a relentless war against whatever she perceived to be social injustices and legal inequities. Her battle against cancer was an inspiration for all who’ve dealt with it, directly or indirectly.  

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Mexico News Roundup

By RICARDO CASTILLO    Mexican Constitution Day Though officially sessions for both houses of the Mexican Congress kicked off on Saturday, Feb. 1, the first gathering to discuss legal issues will be on Mexico’s Constitution Day, Feb. 5. By now, 14 months after he was sworn in, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) has most of his campaign legislative agenda laid

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America’s First Christmas

By RICH GRANT     It is forever Christmas at McKonkey’s Ferry Inn. The dining room in this lovely tavern, located on the banks of the Delaware River, 42 miles upstream from Philadelphia, is always decorated as it would have been on Christmas night, 1776, when George Washington had dinner here. As Washington dined, 2,400 of his men assembled outside along the

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Mexico News Roundup

By RICARDO CASTILLO New Supreme Court Judge The Mexican Senate elected Ana Margarita Ríos-Farjat as a new member of the  country’s Supreme Court (SCJN). Up until now, lawyer Ríos-Farjat had been working as head of the nation’s Tributary Administrative System (SAT), the Treasury Secretariat unit that oversees the nation’s tax collection. Ríos-Farjat received 94 votes from the senators (a minimum

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Landau Confirmed as Ambassador to Mexico

By THE PULSE NEWS MEXICO STAFF Three and a half months after his nomination by President Donald Trump, the U.S. Senate unanimously confirmed attorney Christopher Landau to serve as Washington’s ambassador to Mexico on Thursday, Aug. 1. The position has been open since the departure of U.S. Ambassador Roberta Jacobson, an appointee of former U.S. President Barack Obama, in May

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Remembering Mexico’s Great Liberator

By THÉRÈSE MARGOLIS     Just in case you are wondering why Monday, March 18, is an official holiday here in Mexico, it is in observation of the 1806 birthday of five-time president Benito Juárez, a national hero, who helped chase the French out of the country, overthrew the Hapsburg-imposed empire of Maximillian I, and restored the republic under a liberal regime

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AMLO Enters Presidential Stage Amid Frictions

By RICARDO CASTILLO     Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s (AMLO) daily, Monday-through-Friday, 7 a.m. press conferences at National Palace downtown Mexico City are paying off. Every morning, he gets hold of the nation’s mike to clear out the daily barrage of misunderstandings about his administration. In short, every morning, AMLO gets to wash the dirty dishes caused usually by his personnel and.

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AMLO at Loggerheads with Supreme Court

By The PULSE NEWS MEXICO STAFF     Mexico’s newly instated president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO), is determined to cut spending and reduce astronomic bureaucratic salaries, but just over a week into his administration, he has come loggerheads with the nation’s Supreme Court. After decreeing that no government official salary exceed that of his own – 108,000 pesos a month (which is 40

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