Beatriz Paredes denies fake message on 2030 presidential candidacy

PRI's former senator Beatriz Paredes Rangel denied a fake image spread on social media portraying her as the PRI's presidential candidate for 2030. She clarified that the message does not come from her official accounts. The denial comes days after the PRI announced aspirants for 2027 gubernatorial races.

Beatriz Paredes Rangel, former Tlaxcala governor and PRI senator, responded to an image circulating on social media that depicted her declaring a presidential run for the PRI in 2030. The fake message stated: “They had forbidden me to say this, but I'm going to say it: I will be the PRI candidate for 2030 to fight for the presidency of the Mexican Republic, I hope you support me, people of Mexico”.'nFrom her official X account, Paredes debunked it: “This image has been circulating, with a message posted from an account in my name. The only account I have and manage on X is this one, from which I clarify that what is mentioned there is absolutely false”.'nThe episode follows days after the PRI announced its aspirants for gubernatorial candidacies in the 2027 elections.nParedes's last presidential bid was in 2023, in the internal process of the Frente Amplio por México —PRI, PAN, and PRD alliance— for the 2024 elections. She reached the final stage alongside Xóchitl Gálvez Ruiz but stepped aside after PRI backed the PAN senator. Initial participants included Santiago Creel, Enrique de la Madrid, Miguel Ángel Mancera, Silvano Aureoles Conejo, and Francisco Javier García Cabeza de Vaca.nParedes began her political career as a local deputy in Tlaxcala at age 21. She served as governor there from 1987 to 1992, one of the first women in that role. She held posts as undersecretary in the Secretariat of Agrarian Reform and Governance, ambassador to Cuba and Brazil, and president of the Chamber of Deputies. She led the national PRI from 2007 to 2011.

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Carolina Monroy del Mazo at press conference announcing her departure from PRI to join Somos México, with leader Guadalupe Acosta Naranjo.
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Carolina Monroy del Mazo quits PRI to join Somos México

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Carolina Monroy del Mazo, cousin of former president Enrique Peña Nieto, quit the PRI on April 14 and joined Somos México, a group seeking registration as a political party for the 2027 elections. In a press conference, she said there is no place for her in the current PRI. Guadalupe Acosta Naranjo, leader of Somos México, announced mobilizations against a possible TEPJF rejection of their registration.

On its 97th anniversary, PRI leader Alejandro Moreno Cárdenas called on PAN and Movimiento Ciudadano to form an opposition alliance to counter Morena in the 2027 elections. The appeal aims to unite forces to defend democratic institutions and balance political power. Meanwhile, debate over President Claudia Sheinbaum's electoral reform creates divisions among allied and opposition parties.

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Chihuahua Senator Andrea Chávez requested Senate leave to fully pursue the Morena candidacy for state governor in the 2027 elections. She stated that the current government has abandoned people amid poverty, inequality, and unprecedented insecurity. President Claudia Sheinbaum reminded that all candidates must follow party rules.

Mexico's Green Ecologist Party (PVEM) has identified aspirants for the 17 governorships up for election in 2027 and asked Morena to include them in surveys to maintain their alliance. Senate parliamentary coordinator Manuel Velasco backed Senator Jasmine Bugarín as the frontrunner in Nayarit. The party has not ruled out running independently in some states if unsupported.

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Opposition parties PAN and PRI have announced they will reject President Claudia Sheinbaum's electoral Plan B in the Senate, following its announcement last week after the original reform failed in the Chamber of Deputies. The plan allows promoting votes in revocation of mandate processes—clarified by Sheinbaum as non-mandatory—and includes spending cuts. Movimiento Ciudadano is still reviewing the initiative.

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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President Claudia Sheinbaum defended on Saturday in Morelos the approval of electoral plan B and the decree eliminating golden pensions for former public officials. She said these measures will save nearly 5 billion pesos for public works and social programs. 'Pésele a quien le pese, we will continue governing for the people of Mexico,' she stated.

 

 

 

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