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Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has defended a judicial election meant to transform the country’s court system.
Mexicans will vote in the country’s first judicial elections Sunday. The fiercely debated question is whether electing judges will deepen democratic decay or purge courts of rampant corruption and ...
In a report, the Electoral Observation Mission of the Organization of American States (OAS) offered a critical review of ...
Judicial elections this month attracted little attention, with just 13% of voters turning out. Yet the implications could be ...
The future of Mexico’s judiciary was decided by a small minority of voters after an unprecedented election of federal judges, ...
Nearly 90 percent of voters did not cast ballots on Sunday, one of the lowest turnouts in any federal election since Mexico ...
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum called her country's judicial election 'extraordinary,' despite turnout of less than 13%.
The Morena party controls most of Mexico’s government. Its sway over the Supreme Court is set to increase after a judicial ...
In 2023 alone, the Supreme Court blocked four of López Obrador’s major political projects: his attempt to place the National ...
Mexico held its first-ever judicial elections on Sunday, stirring controversy and sowing confusion among voters still struggling to understand a process set to transform the country's court system.
The average voter in the capital was asked to choose 51 judges out of 293 candidates.