The Dawn of a New Era in Mexico
The heart of the National Palace beat with unprecedented energy. Before the attentive gaze of an entire nation, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, the first woman to occupy the highest seat of power in more than two centuries, stood not as a simple official, but as the architect of a new destiny. His First Government Report was not a mere account of actions; It was an epic narrated with the iron conviction of someone who knows that every word is recorded in the annals of history.
With a voice that resounded like a thunder of hope, the Constitutional President launched a proclamation that shook the foundations of skepticism: “We are doing well and we are going to do better”. It was not a ready-made phrase, it was an oath carved in the steel of determination. A sacred pact with a people who have seen, between shadows and lights, the dawn of a free, independent and sovereign nation. He promised not to rest, not to give up, not to betray. Every hour, every minute, every breath of your days would be an offering for the country.
The Battle Against the Giants of Inequality
The story of his first eleven months in power was woven with the golden threads of feats that seemed impossible. The Fourth Transformation, that ideological beacon inherited from López Obrador, not only continued; It deepened with the fury of a hurricane of social justice. The numbers, cold for some, were epic poems for millions: 13.5 million souls rescued from the clutches of poverty. Inequality, that ancestral monster, was receding in the face of the unstoppable advance of policies that put, for the first time, the poor at the forefront.
The investment of 850 billion pesos in welfare programs was not a simple budget item; It was a torrent of life for 32 million families. The creation of the Women’s Wellbeing Pension, the Rita Cetina universal scholarship and the titanic Salud Casa por Casa program with its 20 thousand servers, were the pillars of a silent but unstoppable revolution. It was the State converted into a giant hug for those who had always been invisible.
The Crusade for Peace and National Sovereignty
But every great story needs a villain, and here there were many. Insecurity, a specter that had terrorized the country, was beginning to give ground to a National Security Strategy that moved with surgical precision. The figures showed early but crucial victories: 25% fewer intentional homicides, 34% fewer femicides. Every percentage point represented lives saved, families intact, futures not stolen.
The judicial field, once a labyrinth of opacity and privileges, was experiencing its own revolution. The free elections for Supreme Court ministers were not just a procedural change; They were the end of an era of nepotism and the birth of a truly popular justice. The constitutional reforms resounded like cannon shots of sovereignty: the historical recognition of indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples as subjects of law, the recovery of Pemex and CFE as people’s companies, the sacred protection of native corn. Each amendment was a cry for independence in a world that constantly seeks to subdue nations.
On the global stage, Mexico was no longer begging, it was negotiating. The relationship with the United States was built on the unbreakable pillar of mutual respect. The visit of Secretary of State Marco Rubio would not be an audience, but a meeting between equals to agree on a framework of collaboration where national sovereignty was the north star.
The Economic Miracle in Times of Uncertainty
The Mexican economy, against all apocalyptic forecasts, stood like a colossus of stability. While the world was navigating turbulent waters, Mexico presented figures that seemed taken from a dream: Record Foreign Direct Investment of 36 billion dollars, a peso that remained firm, unemployment at historic lows of 2.7%, controlled inflation. It wasn’t luck; It was the result of a meticulous strategy that combined pragmatism with idealism.
The Mexico Plan deployed its map of ambition with 5 Economic Development Poles underway, 8 Interoceanic Corridor projects and 18 new industrial parks. But the real jewel in the crown was sovereign innovation: the Olinia electric mini-vehicle, the Kutsari semiconductor project, the Ixtli satellites, the Quetzal unmanned aerial vehicle. Mexico not only consumed technology; I created it.
In education and health, the transformation was palpable. The New Mexican School opened 38 thousand new spaces, the Rosario Castellanos National University promised education for 77 thousand young people. Fifteen new hospitals inaugurated, 31 by the end of the year, 300 operating rooms put into operation. The supply of medicines above 90% was a goal achieved.
And in a gesture that touched the soul of each family, the Housing for Well-being program began the construction of 249 thousand homes, while 189 thousand free deeds were delivered. One and a half million families breathed a sigh of relief with reductions in real estate loans.
As the first female President, Sheinbaum converted the feminist struggle into State policy: the Women’s Secretariat, 25 million Rights Cards, support line 079, 678 LIBRE Centers installed. Every action, a monument to equality.
The infrastructure works, with a committed investment of 121,540 million pesos, and the train projects with 180 billion pesos invested this year, wove a network of progress that united the country from north to south, from east to west.
This was not a government report; It was the opening chapter of a legend. Eleven months of hard work that painted the future not as a promise, but as an inevitable destiny. Under Sheinbaum’s leadership, Mexico was not only moving toward greatness; He was flying towards her.
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