Mexican deputies in committee approve Sheinbaum's electoral reform amid alliance tensions, 45-39 vote.
Mexican deputies in committee approve Sheinbaum's electoral reform amid alliance tensions, 45-39 vote.
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Deputies' committees approve Sheinbaum's electoral reform, despite allies' rejection

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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.

The reform aims to overhaul 10 constitutional aspects, including proportional representation, a 25% cut in electoral financing, and banning immediate re-election from 2030. Following early PVEM endorsement of 90-95% (as Congress submission neared on March 2), allies shifted: PVEM and PT announced rejection. PVEM's Manuel Velasco noted senators could dissent, while PT's Reginaldo Sandoval confirmed opposition. Sheinbaum respects allies' positions, claiming broad public support.

Committee votes: 25-21 in Constitutional Points, 20-19 in Political-Electoral Reform (totaling 45-39 after double votes). Debates featured PRI/PAN interruptions, Morena accusations of violence against Sheinbaum.

PRI's Alejandro Moreno praised PVEM/PT leaders, visiting San Lázaro. Critics like Ciro Murayama highlight risks: persistent overrepresentation, reduced public funding boosting private influence, 25% INE budget cut. In 2024, Morena gained disproportionate seats despite vote shares.

Plenary needs two-thirds (~334 votes); Morena has 253. Board President Kenia López Rabadán eyes March 11 debate—failure discards the bill.

Ohun tí àwọn ènìyàn ń sọ

Reactions on X emphasize the narrow approval of President Sheinbaum's electoral reform in the Chamber of Deputies' committees by 45-39 votes, despite opposition from allies PVEM and PT. Journalists and analysts predict failure in the upcoming plenary session, highlighting potential rifts in the Morena coalition. Discussions reference PVEM leader Manuel Velasco's stance allowing dissent without breaking ties.

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Illustration of Chilean finance committee voting on megareform bill.
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Finance committee approves idea of legislating megareform with ruling party votes

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The Finance Committee of the Chamber of Deputies approved on Thursday the idea of legislating the national reconstruction megareform project. The initiative advanced with eight votes in favor from ruling party lawmakers, four against and one abstention from the PDG.

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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Seventeen state congresses have approved President Claudia Sheinbaum's Plan B electoral reform package, turning it into law after Senate and Chamber of Deputies passage. The measure, needing 17 local legislatures, aims to cap municipal councilors, state legislative budgets, and electoral officials' salaries. Approvals came in Thursday sessions, led by Tabasco.

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