Sheinbaum defends electoral plan B and golden pensions elimination

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.

In Emiliano Zapata municipality, Morelos, Sheinbaum highlighted that plan B reduces the number of officials, electoral counselors, and councilors in municipalities, as well as budgets for the Senate and Chamber of Deputies. This reform, approved by at least 17 state congresses, eliminates re-election in municipal presidencies and deputies starting in 2030, restoring the principle of 'effective suffrage, no re-election'.

The president criticized the high salaries of electoral counselors and private health insurance paid with 'people's money'. The savings will fund projects like drinking water, housing, and road repaving in poor municipalities.

On golden pensions, the decree published Friday in the Official Gazette of the Federation prohibits payments exceeding 134,000 pesos monthly, half the 2026 presidential salary. Sheinbaum cited cases of former Luz y Fuerza, CFE, and Pemex officials receiving up to one million pesos a month, though corrected Pemex data shows 201,961 pesos.

The reform excludes the Armed Forces and the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation. The saved resources will go to Welfare programs and public works, according to the president.

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President Claudia Sheinbaum announces electoral reform Plan B at press conference, emphasizing citizen participation amid ally skepticism.
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Sheinbaum announces plan B for electoral reform with skepticism toward allies

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President Claudia Sheinbaum expressed skepticism about support from PT and PVEM for her Plan B on electoral reform, to be sent to Congress on Monday, March 16. Following the rejection of the original proposal in the Chamber of Deputies, the plan aims to reduce privileges in local congresses and allow popular consultations on electoral issues. Sheinbaum emphasized that she does not see this as a defeat and will prioritize citizen participation.

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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On Tuesday, Interior Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez presented the Plan B electoral reform initiative on President Claudia Sheinbaum's instructions. It aims to cut privileges and spending in electoral bodies and local governments after the original constitutional proposal failed in the Chamber of Deputies. It will be sent to the Senate with PT and PVEM support.

A column in El Financiero examines the political risks for Claudia Sheinbaum from a mandate revocation proposal under the Plan B electoral reforms. This vote would let the president campaign without AMLO's direct backing, measured against his 91.86% support in 2022. The piece notes the challenge of exceeding high thresholds to prevent political failure.

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On May 1, union leader María de Jesús Rodríguez urged President Claudia Sheinbaum for a tax reform to exempt overtime, year-end bonuses, and PTU from taxes. Sheinbaum marked Labor Day by highlighting labor advances and announcing a decree to match state workers' salaries to the IMSS average. The conference took place at a union headquarters in Mexico City.

President Claudia Sheinbaum delivered an accountability report on May 31, 2026, at the Monument to the Revolution in Mexico City, two years after her electoral victory.

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