Senate unanimously approves constitutional reform for judges council

The Senate chamber unanimously approved, with 31 votes in favor, the constitutional reform creating the Judicial Appointments Council and modifying judicial governance. The bill, pushed by the government in October 2024 after the Audio case scandal, aims to introduce radical changes in judge selection and judicial administration. Senators from various parties backed the initiative, though they requested indications for its refinement.

The constitutional reform bill, in its second constitutional stage, was approved in general during the Senate session on Tuesday, December 16, 2025. Initiated by the Executive in October 2024, it arose in response to the Audio case scandal, which involved lawyer Luis Hermosilla and affected figures in the Judicial Power, including judges and ministers.

Among the proposed changes, judicial governance is modified by removing courts from selecting slates for judge appointments and suppressing the Supreme Court's directive, correctional, and economic superintendency, established since 1833. The core of the reform is the creation of the Judicial Appointments Council, an autonomous body based on principles of objectivity, technicality, professionalism, independence, and merit, which will select candidates through effective opposition mechanisms. Additionally, an autonomous body is established for the administration and management of tribunal resources, excluding the Constitutional Court, Electoral Qualifying Court, and others defined by organic constitutional law.

The discussion received cross-party support, though senators raised observations. UDI Senator Juan Antonio Coloma backed the vote but criticized the lack of debate: “This is a constitutional reform, it's something important. Trying to open the vote without a minimum discussion goes against what I believe should be a debate in Congress.” Independent Senator Alejandra Sepúlveda highlighted the questioning of the Judicial Power: “If there's something that has surprised us all, it's how this fundamental state power is under constant questioning today.” FREVS Senator Esteban Velásquez emphasized autonomy: “The demands we all have... those who must administer justice must be autonomous, because otherwise, to some extent, the judicial system... ends up being a puppet.” RN Senator Francisco Chahuán, ineligible to vote, noted it requires modifications. PS Senator José Miguel Insulza saw few objections: “I see this as the beginning of a task.” Finally, UDI Senator Javier Macaya valued the new resource body: “It's by far the most relevant from the perspective of freeing the Supreme Court from a function that has diverted its jurisdictional focus.”

The deadline for submitting indications was set for Thursday, January 15, 2026. After approval, Senator Iván Moreira adjourned the session for a Christmas activity with staff.

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Mexican Senate commissions approve Sheinbaum's 'Plan B' electoral reform with 24-11 vote in a tense session.
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Senate commissions advance Sheinbaum's 'Plan B' electoral reform

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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.

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.

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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.

One week after South Korea's judicial reform laws took effect on March 12—introducing constitutional appeals and penalties for 'law distortion'—complaints against top judges have risen sharply. The National Assembly is set to vote Thursday on the remaining two bills of the 'judiciary trio,' prompting fears of paralyzing the judiciary.

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The Chamber of Deputies approved the national reconstruction bill promoted by President José Antonio Kast's government. The initiative now heads to the Senate for its second reading after the public account on June 1.

In a key step for President Claudia Sheinbaum's electoral reform—initially unveiled February 25 and formally presented March 4 as the 'decálogo por la democracia' (see prior coverage)—the Chamber of Deputies' Constitutional Points and Political-Electoral Reform committees approved the proposal on March 10, 2026, by 45-39 votes. It heads to plenary discussion, likely March 11, amid PVEM and PT opposition despite their Morena alliance.

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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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