Marx Arriaga signs 105 teacher positions in SEP office before departure, after protest standoff.
Marx Arriaga signs 105 teacher positions in SEP office before departure, after protest standoff.
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Marx Arriaga signs teacher positions before leaving SEP

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Former SEP Materials Educational Director Marx Arriaga signed 105 positions for teachers working on honorarios before leaving his office in Mexico City. After barricading himself for four days demanding formal dismissal notice, Arriaga celebrated the process and denied irregularity accusations. The new director is Nadia López García.

Marx Arriaga, who held the General Directorate of Educational Materials at the Secretariat of Public Education (SEP) since 2021, received verbal notice of his dismissal last Friday. He chose to remain in his office in Mexico City until obtaining a formal document, which happened on Tuesday after four days of barricading.

On his last day, Arriaga signed positions for 105 teachers working on honorarios, a procedure that had been ongoing for months and only required his final signature to be regularized. "The most important thing is that the positions for the honorarios colleagues were signed; so the unit colleagues who could have been at risk of losing their jobs, well, their positions are now signed," he told the media.

He assured that his signature was valid, as the process did not start that day. After signing the dismissal document, Arriaga left the offices and announced his return to teaching in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua. "This is the minimum that a worker should receive," he said.

SEP head Mario Delgado appointed Nadia López García as the new director on Monday. López García, a poet, teacher, and activist in educational rights, is married to judge Edgar Adrián Meza Mendoza of the Federal Judiciary.

Arriaga responded ironically to accusations of 'moches' or undue favors from workers: "If I was asking for mooches from the workers... then I should have accepted the embassy that Don Mario Delgado was giving me, right?". He categorically denied any request for benefits and emphasized that his management sought social justice. He indicated there are no formal accusations against him, though there is an investigation into former officials.

Arriaga attributed his departure to Delgado and mentioned his role in designing the new textbooks, barricading himself to prevent changes to a 'neoliberal' model.

Ohun tí àwọn ènìyàn ń sọ

Reactions on X to Marx Arriaga signing 105 teacher positions before his SEP dismissal mix skepticism over potential illegality and links to mocho accusations with support for securing jobs for honorarios workers. High-engagement media posts question consequences, politicians call for probes, and some users celebrate the move.

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Marx Arriaga Navarro leaves SEP building amid cheering supporters, denying kickbacks allegations.
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Marx Arriaga leaves SEP after denying kickbacks

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Marx Arriaga Navarro left his office at the Secretariat of Public Education (SEP) on February 17, 2026, after receiving formal notification of his dismissal as director general of Educational Materials. The former official denied allegations of requesting 'kickbacks' from workers and stated he will return to teaching. His departure took place amid supportive chants from employees.

Marx Arriaga Navarro, former director of Educational Materials at SEP, has remained in his office since February 13, 2026, and claims he has not received formal dismissal notice. The Secretariat of Public Education appointed Nadia López García as his replacement on February 16, following disagreements over changes to free textbooks. President Claudia Sheinbaum confirmed the departure stemmed from differences regarding gender topics and women's history inclusion.

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Mario Delgado, head of the SEP, stated there was an agreement for Marx Arriaga to resign as director of Educational Materials before February 15, though he rejected an offer to represent Mexico abroad. Claudia Sheinbaum assured that the New Mexican School and textbooks will not change, despite the conflict. Arriaga denounces an eviction attempt and defends educational principles.

Chief of Staff Guillermo Francos submitted his resignation to President Javier Milei on October 31, 2025, citing persistent rumors of post-election changes. Spokesman Manuel Adorni will assume the role starting Monday. Shortly after, Interior Minister Lisandro Catalán also resigned, amid a government restructuring following La Libertad Avanza's electoral victory.

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A fresh clash erupted between Santiago mayor Mario Desbordes and children's defender Anuar Quesille over the implementation of the Safe Classroom Law in local schools. Quesille dismissed claims of his institution's opposition to the law as a 'myth,' while Desbordes accused him of siding with those who justify violence. This dispute revives earlier tensions from November.

Interior Minister Diego Santilli met Thursday in San Juan with Governor Marcelo Orrego to advance labor reform. Both agreed on the need for regulatory changes to boost private employment and economic growth. Orrego expressed willingness to seek consensuses for the project.

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Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has decided to dismiss Antonio Hernández, Francisco Salazar's right-hand man in La Moncloa, following sexual harassment allegations against the latter. The measure, agreed with Hernández, will take effect at Tuesday's Council of Ministers. Additionally, María Jesús Montero expels him from the PSOE's Andalucía executive.

 

 

 

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