President Gustavo Petro announces signature drive for National Constituent Assembly amid cheering crowd in Medellín.
President Gustavo Petro announces signature drive for National Constituent Assembly amid cheering crowd in Medellín.
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Government launches signature drive for constituent assembly in Medellín

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Building on prior promoter committee registrations and bills from late 2025, President Gustavo Petro announced on May 1 the start of collecting 5 million signatures for a National Constituent Assembly at a Medellín event. The proposal, if supported, will be presented to the new Congress on July 20 to add chapters on social reforms and anti-corruption to the 1991 Constitution—strengthening, not replacing, it.

During International Workers' Day at Parque de las Luces in Medellín, Petro detailed the citizen-backed initiative, providing a QR code on social media for signatures. He emphasized two key chapters: legislative acts for social reforms and political reforms to combat corruption, amid congressional obstacles to health, pension, and labor changes.

Petro highlighted achievements like the century's lowest unemployment rate and urged workers to join Colpensiones to prevent private fund 'thefts.' The measure addresses perceived institutional blockages without altering the 1991 Constitution's core.

Critics reacted swiftly: Senator María Fernanda Cabal labeled it 'abuse of power,' while Congresswoman Angélica Lozano warned of caudillo-style re-election bids.

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X users react diversely to President Petro's announcement from Medellín of starting signature collection for a National Constituent Assembly requiring 5 million signatures to add social reforms and anti-corruption chapters to the 1991 Constitution. Supporters hail it as empowering the people for essential changes. Critics decry it as an electoral ploy and undue presidential involvement. Media accounts report neutrally on the July 20 presentation plan.

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Tense legislative debate in Chile's Chamber of Deputies over the government's megareform amid opposition amendments
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Chilean government pushes megareform timeline despite wave of opposition amendments

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The Chamber of Deputies' Finance Committee began on Tuesday the detailed discussion of President José Antonio Kast's reconstruction and economic reactivation megareform, amid tensions over more than 1,295 amendments filed by the opposition.

President Gustavo Petro backed the decision by the Citizen Committee for the National Constituent Assembly to suspend signature collection. The move coincides with presidential candidate Iván Cepeda distancing himself from the proposal.

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President Gustavo Petro defended the public health model and sharply criticized EPS during his Labor Day speech in Medellín. Addressing a crowd in Las Luces park, he proposed a national constituent assembly. He highlighted achievements in health infrastructure, such as floating hospitals in remote areas.

Leaders from CGT and CTAs support Buenos Aires Governor Axel Kicillof's presidential bid for 2027. They met in La Plata on Monday to address the loss of provincial labor oversight due to national labor reform. Kicillof called the government's actions unconstitutional.

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