Sheinbaum avoids debate on Noroña’s private flight

The president avoids the controversy over luxury flights, leaving "the people to evaluate" while her senator justifies the expense.

The Austerity of Cuarta that Flies on a Private Jet

In a twist that no one, absolutely no one, saw coming, President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo decided that the best way to put out a fire of hypocrisy was to pour gasoline on it, but with style. The president, with enviable serenity, avoided getting into the swampy debate about the use of a private plane by the always subtle Morena senator, Gerardo Fernández Noroña. His argument was a gem of modern dialectics: “each of us is evaluated by people.” A phrase as deep as a puddle, which basically means “there you, dear citizens, with your bourgeois concerns about the use of resources.”

This whole aeronautical circus began when Senator Fernández Noroña, in an outburst of sincerity that must have left the foundations of the Fourth Transformation shaking, not only justified his jet ride for a tour in Coahuila, but also dropped the bomb: the President of the Republic herself has made use of non-commercial flights in certain circumstances. What a revelation! Who would have imagined that these things would happen in Mexican politics, famous for its transparency and modesty?

RelatedAnalysis of the implications of Noroña’s trip to Palestine

The Art of No Debair and Opaque Transparency

In response to an express question in his press conference at the National Palace, Sheinbaum, with the elegance of a cat getting off a wall, declared: “I am not going to enter into a debate with him. Since everyone is free to give their opinion… I am not going to enter into a debate.” Repeat it twice, just in case someone in the room hadn’t gotten the message that there is no message. Meanwhile, Noroña, from his four-seater vantage point, assured that he does not have to make anything transparent because he is going to continue touring the country. Of course, because what better symbol of connection with the town than a fairly small plane (but private, yes) flying over their heads?

The situation became so surreal that someone, with a glimmer of hope, reminded the senator that the president’s flights on Army planes are, technically, a different thing. Noroña’s reply was a masterpiece of flexible logic: “No, that’s why, but those are not used regularly by the presidency. In austerity policy… that’s why, that’s why.” Ah, so austerity is like a tasting menu: it is applied depending on the dish and the diner. When the journalists, determined to spoil the party, insisted: “Do you think it is austere to use private planes?”, the senator dropped the definitive pearl: “It seems to me that when a private flight is required, it must be done, period.” Full stop. Or full stop, because one suspects that this spectacle of double standards will last for a while.

This is where the wrong situation becomes a screwball comedy. On the one hand, the comrade president has been very clear that private planes should not be used. On the other hand, their star senator uses them and justifies it with “she has done it too, but in a different way.” It’s the political equivalent of “my dad let me do it.” The million-dollar question, which hangs in the air like the smell of jet fuel, is: who defines these certain circumstances? Is there an austerity committee that evaluates whether your trip to Coahuila is crucial enough to merit a jet, or is it more of an “I know when and how”?

As ordinary citizens evaluate, as the president has so kindly suggested, this display of coherence, one cannot help but wonder if the true Fourth Transformation is that of our concepts of what it means to be austere. Is it austerity to fly in a four-seat plane instead of one with a hundred? Is it transparency to refuse to give explanations because “people will evaluate”? It is as if the famous loving republic was transforming, before our eyes, into a “roll up into a ball” republic.

In the end, the message that remains is clearer than the air in the cabin of a private plane: the rules, like the seats, are adjustable. And people’s evaluation, that abstract court, is the perfect scapegoat to avoid having to show one’s face in an uncomfortable debate. A master lesson in the art of contemporary politics: when reality overtakes you, get on a jet and fly away from the problem.

Did you enjoy this ride on the roller coaster of political coherence?Share this gem of informative satire on your social networks and help more people “evaluate” the situation with a smile.Do you want to explore more analysis on the curious contradictions of public life?Visit our politics section and discover how absurdity becomes the daily bread.

Rita Cetina Scholarship will benefit 9 million students

Claudia Sheinbaum begins delivery of cards for uniforms and supplies in Tijuana.

Start up in Tijuana

President Claudia Sheinbaum led the start of the Rita Cetina Scholarship card delivery in Tijuana, Baja California. The subsidy covers uniforms and school supplies for public elementary students.

The program plans to benefit nearly 9 million students nationwide. The support will be dispersed from August through the Banco del Bienestar.

Support details

Sheinbaum recalled that this scholarship complements other programs of the Fourth Transformation: the scholarship for secondary school, the Benito Juárez for high school and the Gertrudis Bocanegra for higher education. The objective is to reduce the financial impact of registration, footwear and materials at the beginning of the school year.

The Secretary of Public Education, Mario Delgado Carrillo, pointed out that more than half a million students in Baja California will receive some federal stimulus. He also encouraged parents to enroll their children in the “Live Healthy, Live Happy” program, which offers nutritional counseling, dental care and free glasses.

The national coordinator of Scholarships for Wellbeing, Julio César León Trujillo, explained that 291,036 primary school students will be added to the 292,392 current scholarship recipients in the state in August. Governor Marina del Pilar Ávila Olmeda and a beneficiary student thanked the extension of this social right, which strengthens the family economy and school permanence.

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Sheinbaum inaugurates CBTIS 290 in Tijuana with an investment of 66.5 million pesos

The new center offers 540 spaces per shift and includes the subject of artificial intelligence.

President Claudia Sheinbaum inaugurated the Industrial and Services Technological Baccalaureate Center (CBTIS) number 290 in Tijuana, Baja California. The campus is integrated into the National Baccalaureate scheme as part of the federal goal of generating 200,000 new spaces for higher secondary education in the country.

Investment and capacity

During the ribbon cutting, Sheinbaum explained that the 2025-2026 plan includes 500 educational infrastructure actions. It includes enabling afternoon shifts in secondary schools, expanding current high schools and building new centers under the unified “Margarita Maza” model.

Governor Marina del Pilar Ávila thanked the federal administration for bringing study options closer to areas of high demand. Sheinbaum recalled that graduates can continue higher education at the Rosario Castellanos National University campus that operates in the region.

CBTIS 290 represented a total investment of 66.5 million pesos: 49.2 million in civil works and 17.7 million in technological equipment. It has two three-level buildings, 12 classrooms and a specialized laboratory. It is the only institution in the area that teaches Artificial Intelligence. It also has a multifunctional court, civic plaza and green areas. Its operational capacity is 540 students per shift.

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Felipe Calderón demands financial support for Pato Merlín

The former president says FIFA must compensate the duck's owners for using his image.

Former president Felipe Calderón Hinojosa criticized the designation of Merlin Duck as the official ambassador of Mexico City for the 2026 World Cup. On his social media account, the PAN member pointed out that FIFA and various media make profits from the image of the bird, so its owners deserve fair payment.

“Yes, very good. It came ‘as a gift’, but we shouldn’t leave it like that: they should give it royalties or good financial support, with all the money that FIFA, many media outlets in the world and others with the image of Merlin Duck are making,” he wrote.

Merlin is a two-year-old Peking duck with white plumage and orange legs. He went viral when he was recorded wearing a National Team t-shirt while accompanying his owners – Karla Gómez and her son Christian – to sell water on the streets of the capital. The family considers him another member.

Calderón insisted that the owner, “that little guy who raised him,” should not be left without options after the World Cup. “Get out!” he added, referring to FIFA.

The popularity of duck has crossed borders. International media replicated his story, and President Claudia Sheinbaum invited him to her morning conference, calling him a symbol of Mexican culture. The controversy over the commercial use of his image remains open.

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