Despite Cartage, Sheinbaum Denies Corporativism
16 Articles
16 Articles
President Claudia Sheinbaum rejected the existence of corporativism in her government or in Morena, after the massive transfer of supporters on buses to the Zócalo, for the rally she led yesterday on the occasion of her first year of government. "It was openly invited, here there is no corporativism, it has to be very clear. We are against the corporativism that took place throughout the period of priism," she said. At her morning conference, sh…
President Sheinbaum states that Omar Garc a Harfuch did not attend the first year's or Government's celebration in the Z calo for work purposes.
A year ago, after his victory in the 2024 presidential election, Claudia Sheinbaum's protest was historic. She became Mexico's first woman president and on Sunday, October 5, she celebrated it from Mexico City's Zócalo. On October 1, Sheinbaum completed her first year of government with 73 percent approval, five points above the figure obtained by former President Andrés Manuel Lopez Obrador, according to the El Financiero Survey.
Jesús Silva-Herzog Márquez, political analyst, in collaboration with José Cárdenas, commented that The president, Claudia Sheinbaum celebrated with a concentration in the Zócalo. It is not enough to exercise a power practically...
Last Sunday, the Zócalo was once again the scene of Mexico's oldest political ritual: that of the denunciation of virtues and great achievements. Dr. Claudia Sheinbaum Prado's first anniversary in power, had as its frame and scenery a great concentration of people—to these acts do not scare carried, attend transported—and politicians willing to applaud and listen with both ears wide open: one to enter the words and another to give them a way out…
Sheinbaum points to a favorable pact with Trump and to an ambitious social plan after his first year of office In a massive event in the Zócalo, in which about 100,000 people participated, Claudia Sheinbaum celebrated her first year of government on Sunday, October 5. Mexico's first woman-in-command highlighted her political, economic and social advances, but admitted that corruption, insecurity and pressure from the United States remain her big…
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