The vote that could change the rules
Today a constitutional reform on feminicide is being defined in the Senate. The proposal seeks to modify article 73 so that Congress can issue a general law that homologates this crime throughout Mexico.
The president of the Senate, Laura Itzel Castillo, announced the session. The idea is to create common bases to prevent, investigate and prosecute these crimes in a coordinated manner between the federation, states and municipalities.
“The aim is to establish common bases for the three levels of government,” explained the legislator.
The numbers behind the urgency
The official figures show a chilling reality. In 2021 there were 1,022 victims; In 2025 it dropped to 732. But only in the first months of 2026 there are already 94 cases.
Sinaloa, Mexico City, Veracruz and Chiapas have the highest current incidence. The lack of homologation in state criminal codes has been pointed out as a serious obstacle to effective prosecution.
The reform aims to define the same national criminal offense with unified sanctions and aggravating factors. Today’s debate will determine whether Mexico moves towards a coherent legal framework against the most extreme form of violence against women.
While lawmakers argue, the numbers continue to pile up. The question is whether this reform will come in time to really change anything.




