Mexico News Daily https://mexiconewsdaily.com/ Mexico's English-language news Tue, 04 Jun 2024 04:26:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/cropped-Favicon-MND-32x32.jpg Mexico News Daily https://mexiconewsdaily.com/ 32 32 Mexico election results: Morena coalition wins large majorities in Congress https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/mexico-election-results-morena-coalition-wins-majorities-congress/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/mexico-election-results-morena-coalition-wins-majorities-congress/#respond Tue, 04 Jun 2024 02:20:19 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=349179 Morena's coaltion has secured a supermajority in the lower house. Will it also dominate the Senate?

The post Mexico election results: Morena coalition wins large majorities in Congress appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
The ruling Morena party and its allies won a highly-coveted two-thirds majority in the lower house of Congress in Mexico’s elections on Sunday. It could also reach a supermajority in the Senate, according to preliminary results.

The president of the National Electoral Institute (INE), Guadalupe Taddei, announced “quick count” results for the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate late Sunday.

Guadalupe Taddei Zavala, INE president
Guadalupe Taddei, president of the INE, gave an update on the election results in Mexico’s Congress late on Sunday night. (Cuartoscuro)

For each party, the INE calculated a range for the number of seats they could win in each house of Congress. The ranges are based on the percentage of votes each party received.

Morena and its allies, the Labor Party (PT) and the Ecological Green Party of Mexico (PVEM), will easily win more than 300 seats in the 500-seat Chamber of Deputies, according to the quick count. The wins will give them a supermajority in the lower house of Congress.

If the three parties win the upper end of their predicted range of Senate seats, they will also achieve a two-thirds majority in the upper house. Final results for the congressional elections are due later this week.

Morena and its allies currently have a simple majority in both houses of Congress.

Polling station ballot boxes
Based on preliminary results, Morena and its allies have won substantial majorities in both the upper and lower houses of Congress. (Cuartoscuro)

A supermajority in both houses would allow the coalition led by Morena to approve constitutional reform proposals without the support of opposition parties. That would give immense power to president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum, who won the presidential election in a landslide.

She has expressed support for a package of constitutional reform proposals President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) submitted to Congress earlier this year.

More on those proposals — and what a Morena supermajority would mean for the current president and his successor — later.

The Chamber of Deputies

The INE quick count results show that Morena, the PT and the PVEM will win between 346 and 380 seats in the Chamber of Deputies. Such a result would give the alliance an unexpected supermajority.

Lawmakers are elected to the lower house both directly and according to a proportional representation system.

The breakdown of the predicted 346-380 seat range is as follows:

  • Morena is expected to win between 41.2% and 42.8% of the vote, giving the party a total of 233-251 seats in the Chamber of Deputies.
  • PT is expected to win between 5.3% and 6.1% of the vote, giving the party a total of 46-52 seats.
  • PVEM is expected to win between 8.1% and 9.1% of the vote, giving the party a total of 67-77 seats.

The three-party opposition alliance made up of the National Action Party (PAN), the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) will win between 94 and 129 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, according to the quick count.

The breakdown of that range is as follows:

  • PAN could win between 17.3% and 18.7% of the vote, giving the party a total of 64-80 seats in the Chamber of Deputies.
  • PRI could win between 11.1% and 11.9% of the vote, giving the party a total of 30-41 seats.
  • PRD could win between 2.4% and 3.1% of the vote, giving the party a total of 0-8 seats.

Citizens Movement (MC) is expected to win between 11.1% and 12% of the vote, giving the party a total of 23-32 seats.

Independent candidates are expected to win between 0% and 0.9% of the vote. Such candidates could fail to win any seats in the lower house, or they could get a maximum of two, according to the INE quick count.

Claudia Sheinbaum walks across a stage with the logos of Morena, the PT and the PVEM parties behind her.
Morena’s coalition with the Green Party and the Labor Party is all but guaranteed a supermajority in the Chamber of Deputies.

The Senate

The quick count results show that Morena, the PT and the PVEM will win between 76 and 88 seats in the Senate. To reach a two-thirds majority, they will need to win a minimum of 86 seats. As is the case with the lower house, Senate seats are allocated directly and according to a proportional representation system.

The breakdown of the predicted 76-88 seat range is as follows:

  • Morena could win between 41.9% and 44% of the vote, giving the party a total of 57-60 seats in the Senate.
  • PT could win between 5.3% and 6.5% of the vote, giving the party a total of 9-13 seats.
  • PVEM could win between 8.6% and 9.8% of the vote, giving the party a total of 10-15 seats.

The PAN-PRI-PRD alliance is likely to win between 34 and 43 seats in the Senate.

The breakdown of that range is as follows:

  • PAN could win between 15.8% and 17.9% of the vote, giving the party a total of 19-22 seats in the Senate.
  • PRI could win between 10.7% and 12.3% of the vote, giving the party a total of 15-18 seats.
  • PRD could win between 2 and 2.7% of the vote, giving the party a total of 0-3 seats.

MC could win between 10.9% and 12% of the vote, giving the party a total of 4-8 Senate seats.

What would a Morena supermajority in Congress mean for the current and future president?

Claudia Sheinbaum stands at a podium in front of a sign showing the logos of Morena and its allies
If Morena and allies win a supermajority in both houses of Congress, the sitting president will have a month to pass constitutional reforms before Claudia Sheinbaum takes office. (Morena/X)

If Morena and its allies end up securing a two-thirds majority in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Mexican Senate, López Obrador will have a one-month window of opportunity to push constitutional changes through Congress. That is because the lawmakers elected on Sunday will assume their positions on Sept. 1 and the president will leave office on Oct. 1.

AMLO, as noted earlier, submitted a package of constitutional reform proposals to Congress in February. Among his proposals are ones to:

  • Guarantee that annual minimum salary increases outpace inflation.
  • Overhaul the pension system so that retired workers receive pensions equivalent to 100% of their final salaries.
  • Allow citizens to directly elect Supreme Court justices and other judges.
  • Eliminate numerous autonomous government agencies.
  • Reduce the number of federal lawmakers and the amount of money spent on elections and funding political parties.
  • Incorporate the National Guard into the military.
  • Ban fracking and genetically modified corn — the latter of which is a source of conflict with the United States.
Marines and National Guard on a beach in Cancún
One of AMLO’s more controversial proposed reforms involves incorporating the National Guard into the Mexican military. (Cuartoscuro)

Opposition parties vehemently oppose many of López Obrador’s proposals, especially ones they regard as attacks on Mexico’s democratic system and institutions.

There is also significant opposition to his plan to reincorporate the National Guard into the military. AMLO put the security force under the control of the Defense Ministry in 2022, but the Supreme Court ruled last year that that move was unconstitutional.

Even if Morena and its allies win a two-thirds majority in both the lower and upper houses of Mexico’s Congress, it is unlikely that López Obrador would be able to get all 20 of his constitutional reform proposals approved in the space of a single month.

That’s where Sheinbaum comes in.

She backs the president’s proposals and campaigned on her commitment to build on AMLO’s so-called “fourth transformation.” If Morena’s coalition has a supermajority in both houses of Congress, there will be ample time to pass the proposals.

Some analysts believe López Obrador sent the constitutional proposals to Congress in order to set the agenda for his successor. However, AMLO asserted on Monday that he didn’t want to “impose anything” on his successor.

Claudia Sheinbaum and President López Obrador stand next to each other clapping at an event.
President López Obrador said he has no intention of imposing his goals on Claudia Sheinbaum, his long-time ally and succesor. (File photo)

“We have to come to an agreement to look at these [reform] initiatives with Claudia and other things,” he said.

A Morena supermajority in both houses would give enormous power to Sheinbaum, who will become Mexico’s first ever female president on Oct. 1.

Given her comprehensive victory over opposition bloc candidate Xóchitl Gálvez, she could rightfully argue that she has a strong mandate to make the constitutional changes proposed by López Obrador, as well as other reforms she puts forward herself.

Mexico News Daily 

The post Mexico election results: Morena coalition wins large majorities in Congress appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/mexico-election-results-morena-coalition-wins-majorities-congress/feed/ 0
Who is Claudia Sheinbaum? A profile on Mexico’s first woman president https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/who-is-claudia-sheinbaum-mexico-first-woman-president/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/who-is-claudia-sheinbaum-mexico-first-woman-president/#comments Tue, 04 Jun 2024 02:18:02 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=349206 She has been a student activist, a scientist, a mother, a mayor and soon, president of Mexico.

The post Who is Claudia Sheinbaum? A profile on Mexico’s first woman president appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo was elected president of Mexico in a landslide victory on Sunday, echoing the 2018 triumph of her predecessor and political ally, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

Sheinbaum, 61, is the first woman to win the Mexican presidency, and was previously the first woman to be mayor of Mexico City.

Claudia Sheinbaum on Election Day
Claudia Sheinbaum’s victory brings another six-year term for Morena. (Cuartoscuro)

Who is Sheinbaum? How did this granddaughter of immigrants, a scientist and academic, arrive at this momentous moment in Mexican history? And what can we expect from her as president?

Growing up in a political family

Claudia was born into a secular Jewish family in Mexico City in 1962, the second of three children. Carlos Sheinbaum Yoselevitz, a chemical engineer, and Annie Pardo Cemo, a molecular biologist, were both second-generation Mexicans whose parents had fled Nazi persecution in eastern Europe.

On her father’s side, Claudia’s grandparents had emigrated to Mexico from Lithuania in the and on her mother’s side, from Bulgaria. In a 2018 NPR profile, Claudia says she celebrated Jewish holidays at her grandparents’ but “her home life was secular.”

The Sheinbaum Pardo family may not have been religious, but they were definitely political. Both of Claudia’s parents participated in the student movements of the 1960s and her father was a member of the Mexican Communist Party.

Claudia Sheinbaum as a kid
Claudia took ballet classes for 13 years. (Claudia Sheinbaum/X)

Silvia Torre, a friend of Annie Pardo, said on the Política Deja Vu podcast that the children grew up in “an atmosphere of political criticism” and that the Sheinbaum family sometimes took their youngsters to visit political prisoners at the notorious Lecumberri prison on the weekends.

Claudia was only six years old when Mexican armed forces massacred students in Tlatelolco in October 1968, but the tragedy made an indelible impression on her psyche — and that of the nation. At the third presidential debate, Claudia said “we are the children and grandchildren of 1968,” which was a crucible for the left in modern Mexico, the beginning of state repression and the “dirty war” that left murders, torture and disappearances in its wake. 

Claudia studied ballet for 13 years, into her second year of studies at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), but ended up choosing physics for her degree, which her brother also studied. She was an active participant in political and social causes, forming part of the larger student movement of the time, which saw its biggest moment in 1986 with the formation of the Consejo Estudiantil Universitario (CEU).

The CEU reacted strongly in response to a reform package presented by UNAM’s dean, Jorge Carpizo, that would have raised tuition and implemented more restrictions on admissions. “Our argument was that education is not a commodity, it’s a right,” said Claudia in an interview for a 2023 documentary made by her son, Rodrigo Imaz. 

Claudia Sheinbaum at student protests in 1987
Claudia Sheinbaum was active in the CEU student strike at UNAM in 1987. (Screen capture from documentary film)

“She was someone who brought order to the endless debates, especially when it was time to make important decisions, like whether to go on strike,” said sociologist and friend of Claudia, Arturo Chávez, in a profile published in the newspaper El País. “She impressed the rest of us with her ability to be systematic and say, ‘This is the way to go.’”

Pursuing an academic career and motherhood

The CEU strike was successful, leading to the defeat of the “Plan Carpizo.” This movement became the nucleus of a new political party, the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD), whose candidate, Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, lost to Carlos Salinas in the fractious 1988 presidential election. 

Claudia married Carlos Imaz, a fellow student and activist, in 1987 and gave birth to her daughter Mariana the following year. She stayed involved in the PRD but was mostly working on her academic career at this time while raising Mariana and Rodrigo, her husband’s young son from a previous marriage.

Claudia Sheinbaum with her young daughter
Claudia with her daughter Mariana. (Screen capture from documentary)

She completed her masters in energy engineering at UNAM and went with her family to UC Berkeley for her doctorate. When she returned to Mexico four years later, she joined the faculty of UNAM’s Institute of Engineering.

Claudia Sheinbaum’s first foray into government

In 2000, when Andrés Manuel López Obrador became the mayor of Mexico City on the PRD ticket, he started looking for people with technical expertise — and political loyalty — to join his government. He asked Claudia to be Environment Minister and to work on pollution problems in the city.

Claudia would be given another mission as part of AMLO’s team: coordinate construction of the second level (“el segundo piso”) of the massive periférico or ring road that hugs Mexico City. The project, completed in 2005, was one of the most significant roadworks in Mexico City in decades, designed to alleviate congestion that was causing a concentration of emissions.

AMLO and Claudia Sheinbaum
Andrés Manuel López Obrador, mayor of Mexico City at the time, with Claudia Sheinbaum in 2004. (Cuartoscuro)

It wasn’t without controversy, however, with critics alleging a lack of transparency throughout the project and excessive costs. The term “el segundo piso” would become a slogan during Claudia’s 2024 presidential campaign, alluding to her promise to build the “second story” of AMLO’s “cuarta transformación,” or fourth transformation of Mexico.

It was during this time that Claudia experienced her first media scandal: A video surfaced in 2004 of her husband, who served in the upper echelons of the PRD, receiving cash from an Argentinian businessman. This was part of a series of videos showing similar circumstances involving people close to López Obrador, alleged to be a conspiracy by AMLO’s political rivals. Imaz accepted responsibility and said the money was for PRD campaigns. He was convicted of electoral crimes but later exonerated for lack of evidence. Imaz resigned and didn’t return to an active political life. He and Sheinbaum separated in 2016.

Sheinbaum continued by AMLO’s side when he ran for president for the first time in 2006. She became his campaign spokesperson after his controversial and very narrow loss to PAN candidate Felipe Calderón, and was instrumental in the investigation of the electoral fraud that AMLO and his team claimed had resulted in his defeat.

In 2007, Claudia contributed to the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which won a Nobel Peace Prize that same year. In the aftermath of López Obrador’s second loss representing the PRD in the 2012 presidential election, Claudia was instrumental in the foundation of the new political party AMLO decided to form. Claudia participated in the brigades and assemblies that went door to door raising awareness about their new party, named the National Regeneration Movement (Morena). 

From Tlalpan to jefa de gobierno

In 2015, Claudia represented Morena in the race for mayor of the borough of Tlalpan in Mexico CIty and won. Her time in office was marked by the 2017 Puebla earthquake, and particularly the collapse of the private Enrique Rébsamen school which killed 19 children and seven adults. Her government received criticism for allowing the school to continue to operate despite apparent infringement of zoning regulations.

In 2018, Claudia decided to run for mayor of Mexico City on the Morena ticket and won with 47% of the vote, achieving her first historical milestone as the first woman elected to govern the megalopolis. “Don’t think because you see this skinny scientist up here that we won’t be strong enough to take on the subject of crime fighting,” Claudia was quoted as saying in a speech shortly after her win.

Claudia Sheinbaum, the first woman to serve as mayor of Mexico City.
Claudia Sheinbaum, the first woman to serve as mayor of Mexico City. (Archive)

While Claudia’s term included major public transportation projects, a massive solar panel installation, digitalization of city bureaucracy, a new public school scholarship program and reductions in crime, two dark events marked her tenure: the COVID-19 pandemic, and the collapse of the elevated Line 12 of the Metro.

While Mexico City suffered a large number of deaths from COVID-19, particularly during the second wave in 2021, Claudia’s management was overall considered prudent and effective and often contrasted with federal public health policies. The city’s vaccination campaign got off to a difficult start in late 2020, suffering from a scattered layout and shortages of vaccines, so Claudia pivoted. Instead of installing many small vaccination sites spread out over the city, she directed the establishment of six mega vaccination centers, which proved to be far more effective. In fact, the federal government subsequently applied the same strategy nationwide.

On May 3, 2021, an elevated section of Line 12 of the Metro collapsed, killing 26 people and injuring around 100. Claudia’s government initiated an investigation (eventually 10 people were arrested and charged, though they have not been tried) and brought in a Norwegian firm to determine the causes of the accident. The firm faulted both flaws in the line’s construction (beginning in 2008) and poor maintenance (particularly after the 2017 earthquake), spreading responsibility for the tragedy across several mayoral terms and mayors. Claudia rejected the report as “poorly executed” and “biased.” In January, interim mayor Martí Batres reopened the repaired Line 12.

CDMX Line 12 Metro collapse
The Line 12 overpass collapsed on the night of May 3, 2021, killing 26 people. Gobierno de México

In discussing her time in office as mayor and her relationship with AMLO, Claudia reflected in a recent interview, “I hope that the people of Mexico feel represented by me, that’s the objective. … President López Obrador is a very respectful man. He never spoke to me by telephone when I was mayor to tell me [what to do], to give me instructions. Never,” she said.

Running for president

Claudia resigned from her position as mayor in June 2023 to compete for the presidential candidacy of Morena. Her opponents were all men, some who had come up in the CEU movement of 1986 (Morena party president Mario Delgado, Senator Ricardo Monreal), and others who had significant experience in government (Marcelo Ebrard, former foreign affairs minister and mayor of Mexico City). Claudia won the party’s nomination in September, with an average of 39.4% support across five polls, and managed to avoid internal ruptures within Morena despite Ebrard’s initial rejection of her victory.

“As an adversary, she is a generous woman. I never felt aggression or hostility from her,” said Ricardo Monreal. “…And in the end, no one left [the party], no one deserted, no one went over to the opposition.”

Claudia Sheinbaum with Alfonso Durazo and Mario Delgado
Claudia Sheinbaum (center) with Alfonso Durazo (left) and Mario Delgado (right) at the announcement of the Morena poll result. (Claudia Sheinbaum/X)

While on the campaign trail, Claudia was often described as disciplined, never going “off-script” from her role as the leader of AMLO’s movement. Polls consistently put her ahead of her closest rival, Xóchitl Gálvez of the PAN-PRI-PRD coalition, but based on election results, even the polls underestimated her popular support with voters.

Last year was also a busy one in Claudia’s personal life. She became a grandmother in May 2023 when her son Rodrigo’s child, Pablo, was born. And she tied the knot with Jesús Tarriba Unger, a fellow physicist and risk analyst at the Bank of Mexico who she knew from college years. They reconnected in 2016, and were married in a small civil ceremony in November in Mexico City.

What to expect of Claudia as president

Claudia is often described as serious, direct and highly demanding of her team. 

“She feels like she has to get her hands dirty … it was very inspiring to see her do the same [tasks] as everyone else,” said her collaborator Pepe Merino in El País, referring to her responding personally to calls to Mexico City’s COVID-19 hotline during the pandemic. “She has a commitment and ethical and moral clarity, leaving you with no doubts or ambivalence.”

“She has a certain maternal aspect, in a sense that she is caring, but it’s clear that she is the one who makes decisions … She navigates these two things gracefully, like a dancer,” says academic Renata Turrent, a member of her campaign team.

Journalist and biographer Jorge Zepeda Patterson says Claudia means “fewer microphones and more Excel” for the 4T movement. “She is a mix of scientific thinking with a personality of doing things well, of meeting goals and meeting the level of responsibility that is demanded, and that is her drive for getting up every day, not like López Obrador’s, which is how he will be seen by history.”

Claudia Sheinbaum and her husband Jesús Tarriba
Claudia Sheinbaum and her husband Jesús Tarriba after voting on Sunday. (Cuartoscuro)

When asked in a recent interview by Fernanda Caso (who described her as “friendly, but reserved”) how she would like to be remembered if she became president, Claudia said: “I want to be remembered as a good president, not just the first woman to be president…to leave the country even better than we found it … and to make even more progress against poverty and [Mexico’s] tremendous inequalities.”

To read more about Claudia’s platform and policy proposals, you can check out the following Mexico News Daily stories:

Claudia Sheinbaum talks security, water and more in El Financiero interview

Claudia Sheinbaum pledges to ‘accelerate’ transition to renewable energy if elected

What would Claudia Sheinbaum do as president?

Sheinbaum: Nearshoring will drive growth in next presidential term

Written by chief news editor Kate Bohné (kate.bohne@mexiconewsdaily.com). You can read more of her work on her Substack, The Mexpatriate.

The post Who is Claudia Sheinbaum? A profile on Mexico’s first woman president appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/who-is-claudia-sheinbaum-mexico-first-woman-president/feed/ 1
Mexico election results: Morena dominates gubernatorial races https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/mexico-election-results-morena-gubernatorial-races/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/mexico-election-results-morena-gubernatorial-races/#respond Tue, 04 Jun 2024 00:04:58 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=349076 Morena and its allies won six out of eight governerships, some by a wide margin.

The post Mexico election results: Morena dominates gubernatorial races appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
In addition to winning the presidency with Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexico’s ruling Morena party won six of eight gubernatorial elections on Sunday, according to preliminary results.

The party founded by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador also won the Mexico City mayoral race, with Clara Brugada prevailing over PAN-PRI-PRD candidate Santiago Taboada.

Candidates backed by Morena and its allies won the gubernatorial contests in Chiapas, Morelos, Puebla, Tabasco, Veracruz and Yucatán.

In Guanajuato, the candidate for the PAN-PRI-PRD alliance won, while a Citizens Movement (MC) party candidate looked set to retain the governorship of Jalisco for that party.

When the new governors and Mexico City mayor take office, Morena and its allies, the Labor Party (PT) and the Ecological Green Party of Mexico (PVEM), will govern 24 of Mexico’s 32 federal entities.

Registered as a political party just 10 years ago, Morena, with Sunday’s results, further entrenches itself as the dominant political force in Mexico.

Clara Brugada and Claudia Sheinbaum hold their hands in the air to celebrate their electoral wins.
In addition to six governerships and the presidency, Morena also held on to the influential mayorship of Mexico City thanks to Clara Brugada’s win. (Clare Brugada/X)

The party — whose name is an acronym of Movimiento Regeneración Nacional (National Regeneration Movement), but also means brown-skinned woman — also won strong majorities in both houses of federal Congress, according to preliminary results, as well as numerous mayoral contests in municipal elections held across the country.

Early results show big win for Morena in Chiapas 

Eduardo Ramírez Aguilar, the Morena-PT-PVEM candidate in Chiapas, won a resounding victory in the southern state, which is currently governed by Morena.

Preliminary results updated at midday Monday showed he he attracted 79.1% of the vote.

Olga Luz Espinosa, candidate for the National Action Party (PAN), the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD), finished in a distant second place with just under 12% of the vote.

Ramírez, a former federal senator, said on the social platform X that he was “very grateful” to citizens who “bet on the the continuity of the transformation,” a reference to the so-called “fourth transformation” initiated by López Obrador and the Morena party.

“There are more of us who want to transform our state, and this was reflected at the ballot box,” he wrote.

Eduardo Ramírez, gubernatorial candidate in Mexico's state of Chiapas, celebrates his win with a crowd of supporters.
Eduardo Ramírez won the Chiapas governship with nearly 80% of the vote, according to preliminary results. (Eduardo Ramírez/X)

PAN-PRI-PRD alliance prevails in Guanajuato

Libia García Muñoz Ledo won the governorship of Guanajuato for the PAN, PRI and the PRD. She will become the state’s first ever female governor.

The 40-year-old candidate won around 51% of the vote, according to preliminary results, while the Morena-PT-PVEM aspirant, Alma Alcaraz Hernández, had the support of about 41%.

García’s victory ensures the continuation of National Action Party rule in Guanajuato, which has been a PAN stronghold for decades.

“We won!” the candidate wrote on X.

“For the first time a woman will be at the front of the governor of Guanajuato,” García said.

“… Thank you for trusting in the best project for our people.”

MC likely to retain Jalisco

Among Mexico’s eight gubernatorial elections, Jalisco saw the closest contest on Sunday. Preliminary results showed MC candidate Pablo Lemus with almost 41% of the vote, while Morena-PT-PVEM hopeful Claudia Delgadillo had 38.5% support.

MC gubernatorial candidate Pablo Lemus waves a Jalisco flag in front of a crowd of supporters, after early results showed him winning the election.
MC candidate Pablo Lemus celebrates his likely win in Jalisco’s tight gubernatorial race. (Pablo Lemus/X)

More than 40% of votes had still not been counted at midday.

Jalisco is currently governed by MC governor Enrique Alfaro Ramírez.

Lemus, a former mayor of Guadalajara, has claimed victory, but as of early Monday afternoon, Delgadillo had not conceded defeat. She said on X that she wouldn’t accept the announcement of a winner until all the votes have been counted.

Morena maintains power in Morelos

Margarita González Saravia, candidate for Morena and its allies, won convincingly in Morelos, according to preliminary results. She will become the state’s first female governor.

The former head of Mexico’s National Lottery attracted about 48% of the vote, well ahead of PAN-PRI-PRD candidate Lucía Meza Guzmán on just over 30%.

Morelos governor candidate Margarita González Saravia and Claudia Sheinbaum pose together, holding up four fingers to symbolize the "4T" movement.
Morena candidate Margarita González Saravia, shown here in a campaign photo with Claudia Sheinbaum, won the race for governor in Morelos. (María Luisa Albores González/X)

Former soccer star Cuauhtémoc Blanco governed Morelos until April, when he stepped down to stand as a candidate for the federal Chamber of Deputies.

Morena is in office in the state and with González’s victory will rule for another six years.

“The people of Morelos triumphed,” the Morena candidate wrote on X above “quick count” results that showed she was the clear winner.

Early results show Morena holding on to Puebla 

Morena-PT-PVEM candidate Alejandro Armenta Mier was a clear victor in Puebla’s gubernatorial election with around 59% of the vote, according to preliminary results.

PAN-PRI-PRD candidate Eduardo Rivera Pérez was well behind with around 33% support.

Armenta will succeed current Morena governor Sergio Salómon Cespedes.

“The only thing that moves us is love for Puebla,” Armenta wrote on X.

“Thank you because with the participation of the poblanos [residents of Puebla], we will continue making history with Dr. Claudia Sheinbaum,” the winning candidate added.

Alejandro Armenta, winner of Puebla's gubernatorial election according to early results, stands smiling at a podium with a sign reading "Ganó Puebla, ¡Gracias!"
Alejandro Armenta Mier was the clear winner in Puebla’s gubernatorial election. (Alejandro Armenta/X)

Morena secures titanic triumph in Tabasco election

Javier May Rodríguez, a former federal welfare minister and ex-head of the National Tourism Promotion Fund, scored a crushing victory for Morena and its allies in Tabasco, the home state of President López Obrador.

May attracted over 80% of the vote, leaving his two rivals with single-digit support.

He will replace current Morena governor Carlos Merino Campos later this year.

“This historic triumph is for all the people of Tabasco, the same people who welcomed us with happiness and open arms on every walk, at every event and in every meeting,” May wrote on X.

“Thank you for believing in a better Tabasco for everyone!”

Veracruz vaults Morena candidate into the state’s top job

Former federal energy minister Rocío Nahle won the governorship of Veracruz for the alliance headed up by Morena. She will become the state’s first female governor.

Nahle attracted more than 58% of the vote, according to preliminary results, well ahead of the PAN-PRI-PRD candidate José Francisco Yunes on 32%.

She will head up the second Morena government in Veracruz when she succeeds current Governor Cuitláhuac García later this year.

“In Veracruz we will continue making history,” Nahle wrote on X.

“Democracy and the continuation of the transformation triumphed. Thank you very much!”

Rocío Nahle shakes hands with supporters after early results showed her winning the Veracruz gubernatorial election in Mexico.
Former federal energy minister Rocío Nahle won the governership in Veracruz, representing a coalition led by the Morena party. (Alberto Roa/Cuartoscuro)

Morena wins Yucatán gubernatorial election for the first time

The only upset among the eight gubernatorial races was the triumph of Morena candidate Joaquín Díaz Mena in Yucatán.

Díaz, who was injured in a car accident last Wednesday, attracted around 51% of the vote, according to preliminary results. Morena will thus take office for the first time in Yucatán, which has been governed by both PAN and PRI governments this century.

PAN-PRI candidate Renán Barrera, a former Mérida mayor, attracted support of around 42.5%.

Díaz, who served as the federal government’s “super-delegate” in Yucatán for almost five years before becoming Morena’s gubernatorial candidate, thanked Barrera on X for conceding defeat.

“I thank him very much for his good wishes for the good of our state,” the Morena candidate wrote.

Mexico News Daily 

The post Mexico election results: Morena dominates gubernatorial races appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/mexico-election-results-morena-gubernatorial-races/feed/ 0
Save on your energy bills with solar panels https://mexiconewsdaily.com/real-estate/save-on-your-energy-bills-with-solar-panels/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/real-estate/save-on-your-energy-bills-with-solar-panels/#comments Mon, 03 Jun 2024 23:23:18 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=347273 Solar panels offer homeowners the chance to sell their electricity back to the grid, while saving the planet at the same time.

The post Save on your energy bills with solar panels appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
With the United Nations suggesting that we all need to transition to green energy sources, making the switch in Mexico is beneficial for both the environment and your wallet. In the upcoming decades, one of the objectives for countries and individuals alike will be self-sufficiency as a step towards creating a more sustainable world, aligning with Goal 7 of the UN Sustainable Development Goals: “Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy for all.” 

Fifteen years ago, Ángel de la Torre González was a pioneer in solar panel installation in Tepatitlán de Morelos, Jalisco. He implemented this initiative not only to make his own household self-sufficient but also two of his dairy ranches.

Photo of a solar panel

Solar energy has one of the lowest environmental impacts among all available energy sources. (Creative Commons)

Today, these solar panels supply 90% of the electricity required to produce 3,200 thousand liters of milk per day on his ranch and 40% of the electricity needed to produce the 10 thousand liters generated by a collective barn he is affiliated with.

“In both cases, whether for my household or milk production, we recouped the investment within 5 years. The benefits are remarkable because, after that period, you are essentially self-sufficient; you consume what you produce, and it is financially advantageous,” he told MND.

As Ángel explains, another financial advantage of installing solar panels is the increase in the value of your property. Additionally, you can generate extra income by selling surplus energy through the net metering scheme. In Mexico, it is now possible to generate your own electricity using photovoltaic systems and then sell it to the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) through three distinct compensation schemes. Furthermore, both corporations and individuals can benefit from tax deductions on the cost of installation.

Photo of a CFE employee
Working with the CFE can help you sell unneeded power back to the national grid. (CFE Nacional)

How can I find Solar Panel installation in Mexico?

Solar panel suppliers do not require a license from the Energy Regulatory Commission (CRE) as long as they adhere to the interconnection and cogeneration agreements with the CFE. You can therefore choose any company you feel will do a good job in installation.

There are numerous reputable brands available in Mexico, including Solarsol, Sydemex Solar, SunPower SAECSA, TrinaSolar, CanadianSolar, JASOLAR, QCELLS, GCL, FitSolar and Jinko.

While it is possible to install solar panels independently, it is often more convenient to employ a specialized company. Professional installers can assist with obtaining permits and navigating the procedures with CFE.

An agreement with CFE is established to enable you to connect your solar panel to the electric grid and monitor the balance between what you produce and what you consume. Requests can be submitted through the website.

Solar panel field
With sun all year round, Mexico is the perfect location to opt for solar. (CFE Nacional)

To sell your excess energy to CFE, you need to meet the following requirements: 

  1. Have a contract with CFE for an average low-voltage supply.
  2. Have solar panels installed on your property.
  3. The panels must adhere to CFE regulations: The power output of the source should not exceed 10 kW for residential use or 30 kW for commercial or business purposes.
  4. CFE must install a bidirectional meter to record both the energy consumed and the energy generated. This enables you to compare and receive compensation for the energy supplied to the grid.
  5. Sign a consideration contract.

More information about CFE requirements are available at their Customer Service Centers.

The three types of CFE contact

As mentioned previously, installing solar panels can be highly cost effective as you can typically recoup your investment within five years. To sell your excess energy back to CFE, there are 3 types of contracts available:

Solar panel in Mexico
While the cost of installation can be offputting, costs are usually recouped within the first 5 years of operation. (La Bodega Solar)
  1. Net Metering of Energy. Allows the customer to consume and generate energy under the same supply agreement. The energy generated is deducted from your consumption.
  2. Net Billing. Allows the customer to receive energy from CFE independently of the energy that the customer generates and sells back to CFE. The energy generated is not subtracted from your consumption.
  3. Total Energy Sale. The customer sells all the energy produced to CFE. There is no supply contract between the customer and CFE.

How much does installation cost?

How much do solar panels cost in Mexico in 2024? According to supplier websites, the cost of panels for an average house is around 50,000 pesos (US$2,830) and the recommendation is to opt for panels that provide more power, even if they are more expensive.

The benefits of installing solar panels

The financial benefits of installing solar panels are undeniable: “In my 15 years of experience with solar panels, the results have been overwhelmingly positive. I highly recommend them for both residential and commercial purposes,” says Ángel.

And for the environment, there are 3 major long-term benefits:

Energy independence: In a country like Mexico, where the sun is available practically all year round this goal is entirely achievable.

Carbon footprint reduction and green energy: Solar energy does not emit greenhouse gasses, thus it does not contribute to global warming. While no energy source, including renewables, is completely free of environmental impact, solar energy has one of the lowest environmental impacts among all available energy sources, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA).

Any questions about how to go about getting solar panels installed in Mexico? Feel free to leave a question in the comments!

Ana Paula de la Torre is a Mexican journalist and collaborator for various outlets including Milenio, Animal Político, Vice, Newsweek en Español, Televisa and Mexico News Daily.

The post Save on your energy bills with solar panels appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/real-estate/save-on-your-energy-bills-with-solar-panels/feed/ 6
Joe Biden and other international leaders congratulate Claudia Sheinbaum on her historic win https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/joe-biden-international-leaders-congratulate-claudia-sheinbaum/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/joe-biden-international-leaders-congratulate-claudia-sheinbaum/#respond Mon, 03 Jun 2024 22:32:47 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=349165 The leaders of Spain, Canada, Guatemala, Venezuela and other countries also posted messages wishing Mexico's president-elect well.

The post Joe Biden and other international leaders congratulate Claudia Sheinbaum on her historic win appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
Fresh from the election victory that will make her Mexico’s first-ever female president, former Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum received congratulatory messages on Monday from world leaders, including U.S. President Joe Biden.

On Monday morning, President Biden issued a statement from The White House complimenting Sheinbaum on her victory:

“I congratulate Claudia Sheinbaum on her historic election as the first woman President of Mexico. I look forward to working closely with President-elect Sheinbaum in the spirit of partnership and friendship that reflects the enduring bonds between our two countries. I express our commitment to advancing the values and interests of both our nations to the benefit of our peoples,” Biden said.

Biden also congratulated the Mexican public for carrying out “a nationwide successful democratic electoral process.”

Global leaders send best wishes to Mexico’s next president

Earlier Monday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau issued a statement on social media saluting Sheinbaum’s win. Trudeau praised the United States-Mexico-Canada (USMCA) free trade agreement as “the envy of the world, and the result of a strong, mutually beneficial relationship,” while proclaiming his desire to strengthen bilateral relations “to create more prosperity for Canadians and Mexicans alike.”

Among the first messages received by the unofficial president-elect (the National Electoral Institute will make it official by June 8) was a social media post from Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez. The post was published at 1:24 a.m. while Sheinbaum was celebrating her historical achievement with a rally in the Zócalo.

Sánchez applauded Sheinbaum for becoming Mexico’s first female president and promised to keep working to solidify bilateral relations. Sánchez later posted that he had spoken on the phone with the president-elect.

Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, also posted a congratulatory message to Sheinbaum on X, emphasizing the “deep historical, economic and cultural ties” between Mexico and the European Union and saying that she looks forward to strengthening relations.

In the wake of a recent diplomatic incident, British Foreign Secretary David Cameron sent his regards as well, posting on X that “the UK and Mexico have been friends for 200 years, working together closely on opportunities and shared challenges.”

Leaders of the Latin American left also joined the chorus. Colombia’s president Gustavo Petro, Bolivia’s Luis Arce, Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, Xiomara Castro of Honduras, Gabriel Boric of Chile, Bernardo Arévalo of Guatemala, Costa Rica’s Rodrigo Chaves Robles and Cuba’s Miguel Díaz-Canel all sent congratulatory messages to Sheinbaum as did Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega, Uruguay’s Luis Lacalle and Panama’s Laurentino Cortizo.

A screenshot of a tweet from Gustavo Petra congratulating Claudia Sheinbaum on her electoral win.
Colombian President Gustavo Petro was another leader quick to congratulate fellow leftist Claudia Sheinbaum on her win. (Gustavo Petra/X)

Sheinbaum wasn’t the only victor on Sunday, though she was the most prominent. On June 2, Mexico’s electoral authorities oversaw more than 20,000 races at the local, state and federal levels. At the federal level Sheinbaum’s party, Morena and allies appear to have won a supermajority in the lower house of Congress and are likely to win a simple majority (less than two-thirds) in the Senate.

With reports from El Economista, El País and Infobae

The post Joe Biden and other international leaders congratulate Claudia Sheinbaum on her historic win appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/joe-biden-international-leaders-congratulate-claudia-sheinbaum/feed/ 0
Mexicans living abroad turn out en masse to vote for their first female president https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/mexicans-abroad-vote-historic-election/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/mexicans-abroad-vote-historic-election/#comments Mon, 03 Jun 2024 21:03:54 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=349101 Sunday's presidential election marked the first time Mexican nationals could cast an in-person ballot on foreign soil.

The post Mexicans living abroad turn out en masse to vote for their first female president appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
Mexicans living abroad participated in Mexico’s June 2 presidential election in unprecedented numbers, casting over 180,000 votes from around the world.

The election that pitted former Mexico City mayor Claudia Sheinbaum against former senator Xóchitl Gálvez marked the first time Mexican nationals could cast an in-person ballot on foreign soil for an election in Mexico. As in past elections, they could also vote by mail or electronically.

Arturo Castillo, president of the Temporary Voting Commission of Mexicans Living Abroad, shared that 39,590 ballots were received by mail, 135,331 votes were cast online, and 5,755 were cast in person at 23 consulates in the United States, Canada and Europe.

According to Mexico’s National Electoral Institute (INE), there were 258,461 Mexicans abroad who were registered to vote in Sunday’s election, the most in history. That number temporarily shrank when some 40,000 people were removed from the voting rolls in April, although 36,570 were subsequently reinstated.

This year’s 180,676 total votes from outside Mexico easily topped the 2018 presidential election’s 98,854 votes from abroad, including 37,000 that were cast online.

Voting hubs experienced significant congestion, with Madrid and Paris extending voting hours until 2 a.m. to accommodate the high turnout.

In Madrid, where seven polling stations were set up, voters arrived as early as 4 a.m. and some waited up to 15 hours to cast their ballots.

In the United States, long lines were a common sight at consulates in cities such as Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York. 

Technical issues with the new electronic voting system further slowed the process, especially for older voters unfamiliar with the technology. Another factor slowing things down was that those who had a valid Mexican voting ID card could vote even if they had not yet registered. 

Ricardo Sánchez, an INE liaison, noted that by midday, only 150 out of 1,000 people in line had managed to vote in Washington, D.C.

In Fresno, long, slow-moving lines and hot weather had people on edge. By Sunday afternoon, there were more than 1,000 people in line, according to the Consulate of Mexico in Fresno, but many were reportedly turned away when the consulate closed its doors at 5 p.m.

“I was here in the morning, and I came back, and the line never ended,” frustrated would-be voter Nayamin Martinez told Fresno TV station KFSN. “About 10 minutes before 5 p.m., they came out and said roughly 600 people have voted but [that] we’re closing.”

Similar scenes played out in San Francisco, Phoenix and Chicago, where the influx of voters caused street closures.

“In some cases,” the INE noted in a statement to the Associated Press, “the large influx of people wishing to vote at the consular headquarters has exceeded expectations.”

“This is sad,” voter Abel Vences told Chicago TV station WLS. The INE “wasn’t ready and was not respectful.”

Despite the challenges, voters in several cities sang traditional Mexican songs, such as “Cielito Lindo,” while waiting in line. In Los Angeles, voters draped in Mexican flags cheered each time a ballot was cast, and street vendors sold food and snacks to those in line.

Claudia Zavala, another member of the Temporary Voting Commission, acknowledged the issues and emphasized the need for future improvements.

With reports from Milenio, La Jornada, N+ and CNN en Español

The post Mexicans living abroad turn out en masse to vote for their first female president appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/mexicans-abroad-vote-historic-election/feed/ 3
5 things you probably didn’t know about Mexico’s ‘Silver Capital’ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/culture/5-facts-about-taxco-mexico/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/culture/5-facts-about-taxco-mexico/#comments Mon, 03 Jun 2024 20:48:40 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=348271 This Guerrero town has a long and storied history from mining to tourism - but did you know it's also an official City of Light?

The post 5 things you probably didn’t know about Mexico’s ‘Silver Capital’ appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
South of Mexico City, deep in the mountains of the state of Guerrero, sits a town that was once one of the largest suppliers of silver in the Spanish Empire. Though it produces less silver now than in years past, Taxco is still world-renowned for its intricate silver jewelry creations and family-run workshops that attract thousands of visitors every year. 

But beyond silver shopping, the town offers a wide variety of cultural attractions that exist thanks to mining. From one of Mexico’s most famous churches — built with silver money — to a hidden pre-Columbian silver mine and a City of Light award, here are 5 surprising things you didn’t know about Mexico’s most famous silver town.

Streets of Taxco
Taxco is best known today for the picturesque streets and silver markets that bring droves of tourists. (Jimmy Woo/Unsplash)

Taxco was one of the 18th century’s biggest silver producers

Sitting atop steep hills and surrounded by dramatic cliffs, Taxco — whose official name is Taxco de Alarcón — was founded in 1529. But it wasn’t the first Taxco: the Indigenous town of that name, now called Taxco el Viejo, lies south of the city we know today. In 1521, Hernán Cortés sent an expedition to find tin ore.  Due to the geology of the region, deposits of silver abounded in the area, and a few years later the Spanish set up the mining camp that would soon become the city of Taxco. 

Under the Spanish, mining in Taxco began around 1524, making it one of the oldest European mining centers in the Americas. However, its true mining heyday happened in the 18th century, after Spanish businessman José de la Borda inherited a mine from his brother Francisco and found the San Ignacio vein. 

De la Borda, who would be described by Spanish King Carlos III as “the most intelligent person known in this Kingdom in mines and in the machinery for their excavation,” made one of the largest fortunes in New Spain with silver mining. 

With his wealth, he built a paved road across the mountains to Mexico City, gave money to the Catholic church and built several buildings for the local community, including the town’s icon: the Parish of Santa Prisca — which leads us to our next interesting fact.

 

The Church of Santa Prisca was funded entirely by a silver miner

Santa Prisca Church
Santa Prisca Church, Taxco’s most iconic landmark. (Armands Brants/Unsplash)

The church of Santa Prisca was built by de la Borda as a way of thanking God for his mining fortune. With its two pink stone towers, wide dome and intricate finishes, Santa Prisca — named after the town’s patron saint — is one of Mexico’s most beautiful churches and an exquisite example of the Mexican baroque style. 

Standing 94.5 meters in height, it was actually Mexico’s tallest building until 1808.

In addition to its magnificent interior and stunning light-pink façade, the church is noteworthy for having been built in just seven years,  between 1751 and 1758 — a record speed for the time. 

Funded entirely by de la Borda, several well-known Mexican artists of the 18th century contributed to the church’s interior decoration, including Cayetano de Sigüenza, Isidoro Vicente de Balbás, José de Alba and Miguel Cabrera. Due to its “great artistic value,” UNESCO included Santa Prisca on Mexico’s tentative list for World Heritage inscription in 2001. 

Taxco’s silver heyday was revived by a U.S. designer

William Spratling with Alaskans
William Spratling (center), the man who brought Taxco’s silver back to the forefront. (Derek Herscovici)

After Borda’s bonanza times, Taxco remained relatively unknown to the world until artist William Spratling revived the town’s old silver glory. 

An assistant professor of architecture at Tulane University, Spratling spent his summers lecturing on colonial architecture in Mexico City and touring the country in his free time. In 1925, he decided to settle down in Taxco to work on his novel, “Little Mexico.” 

Intrigued by the silver trinkets and stones that Taxco locals sold, Spratling began designing his own jewelry inspired by Aztec motifs and Mexican designs. In 1931, he hired local silversmiths and founded his workshop. In no time, his works gained international recognition and many Hollywood celebrities of the time wore his designs.  

To inspire local artists, Spratling began an apprentice program. Notable students who founded their own shops included Antonio Pineda, Margot de Taxco and Hector Aguilar. 

Bracelet. Spratling,
Bracelet. Spratling, (61 Parishes)

Dubbed “the Father of Modern Mexican Jewelry,” Spratling turned the world’s attention to Taxco and its silversmiths, who to this day have remained relevant and recognized worldwide.  

In 2015, archeologists found a hidden pre-Hispanic mine

If you thought finding hidden treasure underground only happens in fairy tales, think again. 

In 2013, during renovation work at Taxco’s Posada de la Misión hotel, construction workers lowering a floor discovered an underground pit that, after further excavation, led them to the entrance of a mine with deposits of silver, gold and quartz. 

Upon exploration, National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) archeologists found that the work that had been done in the mine was superficial and rudimentary, using tools that predated the colonial era. Among these instruments were deer horns, stones and baskets to collect the minerals.

Pre-Hispanic mine of Taxco
The newly discovered mine predated the arrival of the Spanish. (Mina prehispánica de Taxco/Facebook)

Based on this evidence, historians have suggested that the mine was pre-Columbian,  exploited by the Indigenous Chontal of Guerrero — not to be confused with the Chontal Maya — in the 1400s. When the Spanish arrived, the Chontal closed it and kept it hidden. According to experts, they only exploited 2% of the mine. But since it is now below a hotel, the mine is safe from further exploitation.  

The mine opened to visitors in 2015. Entrance costs 180 pesos per person and includes a walking tour inside the mine, a pre-Hispanic cultural show, parking and a drink in the Posada de la Misión hotel.

Taxco holds the title of City of Light

Due to the number of international tourists that travel to Taxco for silver shopping, the town decided to elevate its already charming cobbled streets, red tile roofs and colonial buildings with architectural light. 

In 2019, Taxco gained international recognition as a City of Light, thanks to the town’s light plan. The accolade is granted by the Lighting Urban Community International (LUCI) association, which brings together cities across the world, committed to using light as a tool for sustainable development. 

Taxco at night.
Taxco has been a City of Light since 2019. (Jonas Ducker/Unsplash)

Taxco’s Lighting Master Plan, completed in 2012, uses light as a common thread to seamlessly integrate streets and alleys with churches, architectural features and public spaces. It has encouraged more social gatherings and recreational activities and has helped extend the use of city space at night.

This title is shared with other cities like Geneva, Bruges, Turin and Toulouse, among hundreds of others worldwide. Taxco and Medellín, Colombia are the only cities in the Americas to have received the honor.

Gabriela Solis is a Mexican lawyer turned full-time writer. She was born and raised in Guadalajara and covers business, culture, lifestyle and travel for Mexico News Daily. You can follow her lifestyle blog Dunas y Palmeras.

The post 5 things you probably didn’t know about Mexico’s ‘Silver Capital’ appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/culture/5-facts-about-taxco-mexico/feed/ 3
Morena party candidate Clara Brugada elected mayor of Mexico City https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/clara-brugada-trumphs-cdmx-mayoral-election/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/clara-brugada-trumphs-cdmx-mayoral-election/#respond Mon, 03 Jun 2024 19:21:37 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=349026 The 60-year-old former mayor of Iztapalapa promises to make rainwater recapture, recreation and education more accessible in the capital.

The post Morena party candidate Clara Brugada elected mayor of Mexico City appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
Mexico City will be governed by the Morena party for another six years after Clara Brugada Molina won the mayoral election in the capital on Sunday, according to preliminary results.

Brugada, who also represented the Labor Party and the Green Party, attracted over 50% of the vote, more than 10 points clear of PAN-PRI-PRD candidate Santiago Taboada, who had the support of just under 40% of voters.

Brugada briefly took the stage at Mexico City's Zócalo on Sunday night before president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum addressed the crowd.
Brugada briefly took the stage at Mexico City’s Zócalo on Sunday night before president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum addressed the crowd. (Graciela López/Cuartoscuro)

Salomón Chertorivski of the Citizens Movement party was in a distant third place with about 7% of the vote.

Clara Brugada, a former mayor of the Mexico City borough of Itzapalapa, took to social media to acknowledge her victory.

“Based on the results issued by the electoral authority, the trend is clear: the majority of the people of this city want the transformation to continue,” she said in a post to X in the early hours of Monday.

The “transformation” she was referring to is the so-called “fourth transformation” President Andrés Manuel López Obrador asserts his government is undertaking in Mexico. Claudia Sheinbaum, who won Sunday’s presidential election in a landslide, has pledged to build on that transformation.

With her victory, Brugada will assume one of Mexico’s most powerful political positions — and is already a key ally of the new president.

Previous Mexico City mayors include Sheinbaum, who stepped down a year ago to focus on the presidential election, and López Obrador, who was in office in the capital between 2000 and 2005 before launching the first of his three presidential bids.

Sheinbaum won the 2018 Mexico City mayoral election for Morena, ending the long-running rule of the Democractic Revolution Party (PRD) in the capital. López Obrador, former foreign affairs minister Marcelo Ebrard and Senator Miguel Ángel Mancera all represented the PRD when they were mayors of Mexico City earlier this century.

Brugada, who was selected as Morena’s candidate in the capital despite finishing second in the party’s internal selection contest, is perhaps best known for her “utopía” community center projects in Iztapalapa, which provide free athletic, recreation and education opportunities in the disadvantaged borough.

During her campaign, she pledged to establish 100 additional utopías across the capital’s 15 other boroughs if she succeeded in becoming mayor.

One of the key challenges she will face after she is sworn in on Oct. 5 is guaranteeing ongoing water supply for the capital.

Brugada has pledged to create a water-focused ministry in Mexico City, expand the capital’s rainwater harvesting program and establish a new program for the “rehabilitation” of 11 water sources, among other measures.

She has also said she will allocate “billions of pesos” to water projects in the capital, where many residents don’t have running water in their homes and depend on deliveries from trucks known as pipas.

Security and transport will be other key issues for Brugada, 60, who has also served as a federal and Mexico City lawmaker.

Voters in Mexico City also elected deputies to the capital’s Congress on Sunday. Morena and its allies look set to maintain a majority in the 66-seat unicameral legislature.

Mexico News Daily 

The post Morena party candidate Clara Brugada elected mayor of Mexico City appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/clara-brugada-trumphs-cdmx-mayoral-election/feed/ 0
Third heat wave lingers as hurricane season starts in the Atlantic https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/hurricane-season-starts-mexico-atlantic/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/hurricane-season-starts-mexico-atlantic/#comments Mon, 03 Jun 2024 18:35:47 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=349059 The northern and coastal regions of Mexico will continue to see high temperatures throughout this week.

The post Third heat wave lingers as hurricane season starts in the Atlantic appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
As Mexico’s third heat wave of the season extends into its second week, the 2024 Atlantic Ocean hurricane season is also now underway.

Mexico’s National Meteorological Service (SMN) issued a forecast early Monday warning of high temperatures throughout the country, and advising the public to avoid prolonged exposure to solar radiation and stay hydrated.

Originally forecast to last from May 20-28, the third heat wave will continue to scorch the country throughout this week, in particular the northern and coastal regions of Mexico. Heat alerts were issued for 12 of 16 Mexico City boroughs over the weekend.

The report forecasts temperatures in excess of 45˚C for states in the northeast and along the Gulf Coast. Included in this list are Nuevo León, Tamaulipas, Veracruz, Tabasco, San Luis Potosí and Chiapas.

States in the northwest and along the Pacific Coast can expect temperatures in the 40˚ to 45˚C range. These states include Baja California, Baja California Sur, Chihuahua, Sinaloa, Sonora, Colima, Durango, Jalisco and Nayarit.

The weather agency also issued heavy storm alerts for Chiapas, Coahuila, Nuevo León and Tamaulipas, alerting local authorities to be prepared for up to 50 mm of rain. In addition, México state, Guanajuato, Jalisco, Michoacán, Oaxaca, Querétaro and San Luis Potosí could see 25 mm of rain.

Residents in these states were cautioned about the danger of landslides and flooding, and were advised to be attentive to warnings issued by the authorities.

Meanwhile, the 2024 Atlantic Hurricane Season officially started on June 1 and is forecast to run through Nov. 30. This is the most aggressive Atlantic hurricane season the United States’ National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has ever forecast. 

NOAA tracked four tropical waves moving between Africa and the Caribbean last week, but no tropical cyclone activity developed. This is the second time in three years that there were no pre-hurricane season storms, Fox News reported.

The Atlantic Basin could see up to 25 total named storms (the average is 14), up to 13 hurricanes and up to seven major hurricanes this year. The Pacific hurricane season officially began on May 15, and meteorologists expect 15-18 storm systems this year.

The main reason why this Atlantic hurricane season is expected to be particularly intense is a combination of high sea surface temperatures and the onset of the La Niña climate phenomenon. This is predicted to bring increased rains to parts of Mexico this year, a relief after the extensive drought experienced during El Niño in 2023 and into this year.

With reports from Excelsior, Fox News and NBC Channel 12 News

The post Third heat wave lingers as hurricane season starts in the Atlantic appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/hurricane-season-starts-mexico-atlantic/feed/ 2
Peso depreciates the morning after Mexico’s elections https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/peso-falls-mexico-elections/ https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/peso-falls-mexico-elections/#comments Mon, 03 Jun 2024 17:38:21 +0000 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/?p=348993 Investors perceived greater risk in Mexico as preliminary election results indicate the Morena party sweeping not just the presidency, but also Congress.

The post Peso depreciates the morning after Mexico’s elections appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
The Mexican peso depreciated sharply on Monday morning after election results showed that Claudia Sheinbaum was elected president of Mexico and the ruling Morena party was on track to win large majorities in both houses of federal Congress.

The peso was trading at under 17 to the US dollar on Sunday but depreciated to as low as 17.7 on Monday morning according to Bloomberg data. In percentage terms, the peso declined around 4%.

Mexico's stock exchange building, the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores
Mexico’s stock market (Grupo BMV) fell by nearly 5% on Monday, with some stocks slipping by 10%. (Moisés Pablo Nava/Cuartoscuro)

At 10 a.m. Mexico City time, the peso had recovered somewhat to trade at 17.58 to the dollar but was back up to 17.69 by 11 a.m.

Gabriela Siller, director of economic analysis at Mexican bank Banco Base, said on X that the peso had depreciated due to “greater risk.”

She wrote that “80% of peso vs dollar transactions are speculative” and that “the risk-reward trade-off” for investors had changed due to the election result.

“With a majority in the Congress, Morena and its allies could change the constitution,” Siller said.

Janneth Quiroz, director of analysis at the Monex financial group, said on X that the peso depreciated due to “nervousness” among investors following the announcement of preliminary election results.

Those results showed that Morena and its allies, the Labor Party and the Ecological Green Party of Mexico, were likely to win a two-thirds majority in the lower house of Congress, and could also achieve a supermajority in the Senate.

A two-thirds majority in both houses would allow Morena and its allies to approve constitutional reform proposals without the support of opposition parties.

That possibility “generated concern” in the market, said Quiroz, who noted that the peso had depreciated to its weakest position since last November.

Sheinbaum’s victory was widely expected as she maintained a commanding lead in the polls throughout the three-month-long campaign period. But Morena and its allies weren’t widely expected to win two-thirds majorities in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate.

Buoyed by a large differential between interest rates in Mexico and those in the United States, as well as strong incoming flows of remittances and foreign investment, the peso has performed well against the dollar for an extended period.

In April, the peso reached 16.30 to the dollar, its strongest position in almost nine years.

The low of 17.7 on Monday morning represents a depreciation of around 8% for the peso compared to that level.

Mexico News Daily 

The post Peso depreciates the morning after Mexico’s elections appeared first on Mexico News Daily

]]>
https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-elections-2024/peso-falls-mexico-elections/feed/ 1