Vertigo speed for a key reform
Less than a day. That’s how long it took for Claudia Sheinbaum’s so-called ‘Plan B’ to get the approval of 17 local congresses. He already has constitutionality in his pocket. Tabasco, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Mexico City… the list of states that approved the minutes in express sessions is long and easily exceeds the magic number required.
And what does this package bring?
It is sold as an austerity measure. The star point: putting a ceiling on the salaries of electoral councilors and magistrates. No one can win more than the president herself. General adjustments to institutional spending complete the menu.
Here’s the juicy detail: it was approved without a single change with respect to the project that the Senate sent. That means that the revocation of the presidential mandate, an original proposal of the Executive that fell by the wayside, fell through.
The legislatures that approved the minutes in extraordinary sessions include, among others, Tabasco, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Quintana Roo, Guerrero, Mexico City, State of Mexico, Veracruz and Puebla.
With the state guarantees already in place, the next step is almost a procedure. The Chamber of Deputies is expected to issue the official declaration of constitutionality this Tuesday, April 14. The legislative machine has worked with a synchronization worthy of a Swiss clock. Or, depending on the lens through which you look, with a haste that invites more than one question.




