No progress at the dialogue table
Nine days before the start of the 2026 Soccer World Cup, the National Coordinator of Education Workers (CNTE) reported that there was no substantial progress after a meeting of almost four hours with federal officials. The teachers return this Wednesday to a new table to learn about the government’s response to their central demands: a direct meeting with President Claudia Sheinbaum, the repeal of the ISSSTE Law of 2007, the elimination of the System Unit for the Career of Teachers and the repeal of the educational reform.
Tuesday’s meeting was led by the Secretary of the Interior, Rosa Icela Rodríguez; the Secretary of Public Education, Mario Delgado, and the general director of the ISSSTE, Martí Batres. The authorities promised to respond this Wednesday at 10:00 a.m. if there is a route to address the demands and if there will be a meeting with the president.
“Today we come with the demand that the negotiation table has to be established with the president. We live in a presidential country and the last word is said by the Executive. Today we come for concrete answers,” said the teachers’ representatives.
Pedro Hernández Morales, general secretary of Section 9 of Mexico City, indicated that the National Representative Assembly ordered to find a formal agenda with Sheinbaum. After 18 months, he said, “we still have no agenda with the President of the Republic.”
Signals and next steps
The CNTE condemned the acts of violence in recent mobilizations and held the government responsible for actions that they consider excessive. They demanded comprehensive reparation for the injured teachers and guarantees of non-repetition, in addition to the removal of the fences in the Zócalo.
Yenny López Martínez, general secretary of Section 22 of Oaxaca, explained that the leadership will take the results to the National Representative Assembly. The government only proposed resuming the table on Wednesday, without committing to a meeting with Sheinbaum. “It is not up to us as leadership to accept this table or not,” he stated.
“We have had the same response for months. That is enough for society to know that what we have had is a delay,” said López.
The CNTE reiterated that it maintains the national strike that began on July 1 and will define actions after the government response this Wednesday.




