47 minutes of complicit silence
The shortest morning of Sheinbaum’s six-year term lasted as long as one episode of a series. 47 minutes exactly. Started at 7:37, finished at 8:24. And in the middle, the usual: guests, signatures, applause. Awkward questions: zero.
The excuse was the “historic” signing of the agreement for the steel industry. Historical in quotes, because if we know anything it is that agreements with great fanfare usually end in a dead letter. But hey, there were Raquel Buenrostro, Marcelo Ebrard, and the presidents of Canacero, Canadevi and CMIC. Everyone smiling.
What was not said
The most revealing thing was not what was said, but what was left unsaid. Ariadna Montiel resigned from Bienestar to seek Morena’s candidacy. Leticia Ramírez Amaya is now the new secretary. Any questions? None.
Marcelo Ebrard continues to drag the scandal of his son’s accommodation in the Mexican embassy in the United Kingdom in 2021. Did anyone ask? Nobody.
And the classic Wednesday Lie Detector was conspicuous by its absence. As if the truth were optional when there is a rush.
The press, tamed
“You can go early to breakfast,” Sheinbaum said as he closed.
And they left. Without joking. Without asking about the march on October 2, the riots in the Zócalo, the arrests. Nothing.
This is not new. The second shortest morning was on October 3, 2025: 52 minutes, with young people singing from México Canta. That day also left without questions, while reporters shouted from behind: “Now, now, tomorrow.”
The pattern
Every time there are thorny issues, the morning gets shorter. Coincidence, of course. Like when my dad’s lawyer lost that case against corruption: there is always a convenient time to not respond.
The worst thing is not that Sheinbaum avoids questions. The worst thing is that the press leaves it. 47 minutes and not a single question about Ebrard, about Bienestar, about the arrests. That’s not journalism. That’s calling a press conference to have your photo taken.
Tomorrow will be another day. Or not.




