Morena proposes delaying judges' election to 2028

A group of Morena deputies presented an initiative to amend the judicial reform and postpone the election of the second batch of judges to the first Sunday of June 2028, instead of 2027. The proposal aims to avoid overlap with partisan elections to preserve judicial impartiality. It includes changes to candidate evaluations and the creation of a Single Evaluation Committee.

Federal deputies from Morena, led by Alfonso Ramírez Cuéllar, the parliamentary group's vicecoordinator, presented a constitutional reform initiative affecting 10 articles of the Constitution: 76, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 116, and 122. The proposal, also signed by retired minister Olga Sánchez Cordero, Javier Corral, and Susana Harp among others, sets the judicial election for 2028 to separate it from 2027 partisan contests.

In the statement of motives, Ramírez Cuéllar argued that overlapping with partisan elections could blur the line between technical merits and politics, harming the Judiciary's legitimacy. It proposes a Single Evaluation Committee with three representatives from the Executive, Legislative, and Judicial branches, appointed by the president or president-elect, the Supreme Court, and the Justice committees of the legislative chambers.

Key changes include the National Electoral Institute (INE) issuing the call and compiling the candidate list, replacing the Senate. Aspiring judges would take knowledge exams prepared by the National Judicial Training School and administered by public universities, plus requiring competency certification from that school.

The initiative emphasizes objective evaluation criteria, removing subjective requirements like specific academic averages, to enhance technical quality and depoliticize the process.

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Dramatic illustration of Mexico's Chamber of Deputies rejecting Sheinbaum's electoral reform 259-234, with Morena's Ricardo Monreal announcing Plan B.
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Chamber of deputies rejects Sheinbaum's electoral reform

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The Chamber of Deputies rejected President Claudia Sheinbaum's electoral reform on March 11, 2026, failing to reach the required qualified majority. With 259 votes in favor and 234 against, the initiative was defeated due to opposition from allies like PT and PVEM. Ricardo Monreal from Morena announced that the party will prepare a 'Plan B' to advance it.

President Claudia Sheinbaum has instructed incoming Legal Counsel Luisa María Alcalde to assess postponing the 2027 judicial election to 2028, in light of a bill introduced by Morena lawmakers last week. The proposal seeks to separate it from midterms for impartiality and reform candidate selection. An INE counselor warned that combining elections would not save costs.

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President Claudia Sheinbaum sent a constitutional reform initiative to the Senate on Wednesday to move judicial elections from 2027 to 2028. The proposal seeks to refine candidate selection following criticisms of the 2025 polls.

Mexico's Chamber of Deputies rejected President Claudia Sheinbaum's electoral reform proposal, with 259 votes in favor and 234 against, falling short of the required qualified majority. Sheinbaum denied it was a defeat and announced a Plan B to be sent to Congress next Monday, focusing on changes without constitutional reform. The initiative aims to reduce political privileges and strengthen citizen participation.

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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.

Andalusia's Junta president, Juanma Moreno, announced Parliament's dissolution and regional elections for May 17, advancing the date initially set for June. The move follows a full four-year term, unseen in 14 years, aiming to boost turnout by avoiding events like the Pope's visit. PSOE candidate María Jesús Montero will leave her role as Spain's first deputy prime minister to focus on the campaign.

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