Brazilian Senate session illustrating postponement of electoral reform Plan B debate, with senators announcing delay and calendar update on screen.
Brazilian Senate session illustrating postponement of electoral reform Plan B debate, with senators announcing delay and calendar update on screen.
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Senate postpones discussion on electoral reform plan B

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The Senate postponed discussion of the electoral reform plan B from March 23 to March 24 due to technical reviews and internal PT debates on the revocation of mandate date. The PT objects to holding it in the third year of government, as it would overlap with the 2027 elections. The opposition praised the PT for criticizing the bill.

The discussion of the so-called plan B electoral reform, proposing constitutional changes to reduce privileges and strengthen mandate revocation, was postponed in the Senate. It was scheduled for March 23 in the joint Constitutional Points and Legislative Studies committees but rescheduled to March 24 due to wording adjustments and lack of distribution of the opinion, per a circular from the technical secretariats. Regulations require at least 24 hours after delivery for debate. Alberto Anaya, PT president and Senate coordinator, confirmed debates on the revocation consultation date, proposed for June of the third or fourth year of government. “The Party is clear that the core debate is the date issue, and these are matters under review,” Anaya said after meeting Ignacio Mier Velazco, Morena coordinator. The PT rejects the third year due to overlap with 2027 elections renewing governorships. Óscar Cantón Zetina and Enrique Insunza Casarez, commission presidents, said the initiative remains but they are hearing PT, governors, municipalities, and INE. “The initiative is preserved as is for now. We are reviewing everything,” Cantón Zetina stated. Insunza noted President Claudia Sheinbaum has the right to speak in the process. The opposition, including Ricardo Anaya Cortés (PAN), Clemente Castañeda (MC), and Manuel Añorve (PRI), praised the PT for questioning the plan, claiming Morena aims to weaken allies. Mier expects the opinion ready soon for Pleno discussion before Holy Week Tuesday.

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Discussions on X focus on the Senate postponing the Plan B electoral reform debate due to PT's opposition to the revocation of mandate timing, conflicting with 2027 elections. Reactions highlight internal coalition tensions between Morena, PT, and PVEM, with official reasons cited as technical reviews. Opposition praised PT's stance against the bill. Sentiments include skepticism about the 'technical' excuse, concerns over further delays, and criticism labeling it a 'Plan Maduro.' Journalists and news outlets dominate high-engagement posts.

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Mexican senators in heated debate over President Sheinbaum's Plan B electoral reform amid PT absence, Senate chamber.
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Senate debates Sheinbaum's Plan B electoral reform without PT

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Mexico's Senate Pleno debates President Claudia Sheinbaum's Plan B electoral reform on March 25, after approval in committees despite the Labor Party (PT)'s absence. The main controversy concerns the revocation of mandate date, potentially coinciding with 2027 midterm elections. Opposition criticizes the bill and PT remains uncertain on its vote.

Mexico's Senate commissions on Constitutional Points and Legislative Studies approved President Claudia Sheinbaum's 'Plan B' electoral reform bill on March 24, following its presentation a week earlier. The measure passed with 24 votes in favor and 11 against after over five hours of debate and now heads to the full Senate, despite PT opposition to the 2027 revocation referendum date.

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Mexico's Senate approved the Plan B electoral reform with 87 votes in favor and 41 against, removing proposed changes to presidential recall via a Partido del Trabajo (PT) reserve. The measure aims to cut costs and privileges at the National Electoral Institute (INE) and other bodies. President Claudia Sheinbaum hailed the privilege cuts but regretted the recall omission.

President Claudia Sheinbaum delayed the submission of her electoral reform initiative to Congress again, citing reviews of the wording to avoid contradictions. Morena is seeking to convince its PT and PVEM allies to support the proposal, which includes budget cuts and changes to plurinominales. The PVEM backs 95% of the initiative, though it debates the method for electing legislators.

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President Claudia Sheinbaum sent her electoral reform initiative to the Chamber of Deputies on March 4, 2026, dubbed the 'Decalogue for Democracy', aiming to amend 11 constitutional articles to cut costs and enhance oversight. The proposal faces resistance from allies like the PT and opposition, who criticize it for inadequately addressing organized crime influence. Sheinbaum mentioned having a 'Plan B' if it fails to pass.

Deputies from PAN and PRI in the Chamber of Deputies demanded dialogue tables with experts and civil society to discuss the electoral reform. Meanwhile, Morena's Ricardo Monreal conditioned its presentation on consensus with PT and PVEM. President Claudia Sheinbaum denied that the reform leads to authoritarianism and outlined its goals to strengthen democracy.

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Morena leaders, including Luisa María Alcalde and Guillermo Rafael Santiago, have denied speculations about preserving the current plurinominal system in the electoral reform, stating changes will strengthen representativeness and cut costs. Negotiations continue at the Secretaría de Gobernación, with allies PT and PVEM. Ricardo Monreal corrected his initial claim that the issue was settled.

 

 

 

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