Sheinbaum reveals José Ángel Gurría's 120,000-peso pension

President Claudia Sheinbaum announced plans to eliminate millionaire pensions for former officials, including that of José Ángel Gurría, who receives 120,000 pesos monthly from Nafin. The initiative aims to set a cap of around 70,000 pesos, equivalent to 50% of the presidential salary. This reform will be presented in the coming days and will affect trust officials, excluding the Armed Forces.

During her morning conference on February 20, 2026, President Claudia Sheinbaum revealed that José Ángel Gurría, former Secretary of Finance and former OECD director general, receives a 120,000-peso monthly pension as a former Nafin official. Sheinbaum questioned this amount, stating: “Imagine, Gurría, how much Gurría earns as OECD director and then he is also collecting a Nafin pension”.

Gurría has been one of the critics of the Fourth Transformation (4T). The pension corresponds to his time as Nafinsa director. Sheinbaum included this case in her plan to eliminate millionaire pensions, which will affect former collaborators from entities like Pemex, CFE, the defunct Luz y Fuerza, and Nafin.

The proposal, developed with the Anti-Corruption and Good Government Secretariat and the President's Legal Counsel, will amend Article 127 of the Constitution to set a cap of approximately 70,000 pesos monthly. This equals 50% of the Executive's salary. According to Raquel Buenrostro, Anti-Corruption head, Nafin pays 643 million pesos annually to 1,449 trust retirees.

The estimated savings, up to 5 billion pesos, will go to Welfare Programs. Sheinbaum stressed the reform is not retroactive, though it sparks debates on acquired rights and potential lawsuits. In total, 94,153 people receive pensions from 300,000 to over one million pesos monthly, per presented data.

The measure fits within republican austerity and aims to address inequalities, but it has ignited discussions on its fiscal and political impact, including views that it targets government critics.

相关文章

Senator Gerardo Fernández Noroña passionately defends his son's high CFE salary at a press conference amid nepotism controversy.
AI 生成的图像

Noroña defends son's CFE salary amid criticisms

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

Senator Gerardo Fernández Noroña defended his son Kin Yael Villafaña Morán's job and pay at the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE), calling accusations a 'vile campaign'. The controversy erupted after taunts from Luis Felipe Calderón Zavala on social media about alleged nepotistic promotion. Patrimonial declarations show the son reported over one million pesos in net income in 2024.

President Claudia Sheinbaum revealed she will send Congress an initiative to eliminate million-peso pensions for former high-ranking officials in entities like Pemex and CFE. The proposed cap is half the presidential salary, around 70,000 pesos monthly. The savings, estimated at 5 billion pesos, will go to Bienestar programs.

由 AI 报道

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.

Provincial deputy Santiago Pérez Pons filed a criminal complaint against Mayor Bruno Cipolini and his economic team for irregularities in handling public funds invested in risky stock instruments. The accusation alleges embezzlement and lack of authorization, amid deficit budgets. The municipality defends its actions as legal and plans to recover the lost funds.

由 AI 报道

President Gustavo Petro defended his pension reform in response to Skandia CEO Santiago García, who warned about minimum wage hikes above inflation. Petro stressed that long-term sustainability relies on national wealth and productivity, not real wages. He highlighted that pensions must adjust to the vital basket.

Mexican actor Carlos Bonavides has publicly defended former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and President Claudia Sheinbaum, highlighting their achievements amid criticism. In an October 2024 interview, Bonavides called AMLO the best leader since Moctezuma's time and urged giving Sheinbaum a chance.

由 AI 报道

President Claudia Sheinbaum sent her electoral reform initiative to the Chamber of Deputies on March 4, 2026, dubbed the 'Decalogue for Democracy', aiming to amend 11 constitutional articles to cut costs and enhance oversight. The proposal faces resistance from allies like the PT and opposition, who criticize it for inadequately addressing organized crime influence. Sheinbaum mentioned having a 'Plan B' if it fails to pass.

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝