Mexican Senate chamber during vote on Plan B electoral reform, showing 87-41 tally in favor.
Mexican Senate chamber during vote on Plan B electoral reform, showing 87-41 tally in favor.
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Mexican Senate approves Plan B electoral reform without revocation changes

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Mexico's Senate approved the Plan B electoral reform with 87 votes in favor and 41 against, removing proposed changes to presidential recall via a Partido del Trabajo (PT) reserve. The measure aims to cut costs and privileges at the National Electoral Institute (INE) and other bodies. President Claudia Sheinbaum hailed the privilege cuts but regretted the recall omission.

Mexico's Senate approved the Plan B electoral reform bill on Thursday, March 26, with 87 votes in favor and 41 against, requiring a qualified majority, and sent it to the Chamber of Deputies. In particular debate, PT Senator Lizeth Sánchez García's accepted reserve removed changes to constitutional Article 35 on presidential recall, keeping it unchanged. She argued that recall and elections serve different purposes and mixing them risks distorting democratic intent, while reaffirming PT support for Sheinbaum's project. Proposals from Morena, PAN, PRI, Movimiento Ciudadano, PVEM, and PT were rejected, approving original changes to Articles 115, 116, and 134. Key measures include salary caps for electoral counselors and magistrates not exceeding the president's pay; municipal councils limited to one syndicatura and up to 15 councilors; state congress budgets capped at 0.7% of total entity spending; and a progressive 15% Senate budget cut over four fiscal years. In her March 26 morning conference, Sheinbaum celebrated the Plan B for putting the INE 'on a diet' and ending privileges like major medical expense insurance for counselors. She said savings would go to health, education, and welfare programs. She criticized PRI, PAN, and Movimiento Ciudadano legislators for opposing recall flexibility in 2027, claiming fear of its midterm election impact. She also reproached PT, stating it is 'bad for Mexico' that the part was not approved, though without breaking alliance. Morena Senate leader Ignacio Mier denied failure, emphasizing republican austerity and stability. Opposition parties celebrated the recall rejection.

Vad folk säger

Reactions on X to the Mexican Senate's approval of Plan B electoral reform, which cuts INE costs but omits PT-proposed changes to presidential recall, are divided. Morena supporters celebrate the passage and austerity measures despite the omission, while critics label it a diluted reform or a victory for opposition by blocking mandate revocation tweaks. President Sheinbaum's mixed response is noted.

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Mexican senators in heated debate over President Sheinbaum's Plan B electoral reform amid PT absence, Senate chamber.
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Senate debates Sheinbaum's Plan B electoral reform without PT

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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.

Following the Senate's approval on March 26, Mexico's Chamber of Deputies passed the Plan B electoral reform in general debate with 377 votes in favor and 102 against. Promoted by President Claudia Sheinbaum, the initiative seeks to reduce privileges in electoral bodies and local governments. Particular debate continues.

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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.

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 presented her electoral reform proposal on February 25, 2026, aiming to eliminate plurinominal lists in the Senate and cut election costs by 25 percent. The initiative, to be sent to Congress on March 2, keeps 500 deputies but requires all to compete for direct votes. INE counselors warn that changes like eliminating permanent district boards represent a 45-year regression.

President Claudia Sheinbaum delayed the submission of her electoral reform initiative to Congress again, citing reviews of the wording to avoid contradictions. Morena is seeking to convince its PT and PVEM allies to support the proposal, which includes budget cuts and changes to plurinominales. The PVEM backs 95% of the initiative, though it debates the method for electing legislators.

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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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