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Mexico's historic judicial elections attracted little attention, but the implications could be far-reaching.
Latin America Mexico’s Judicial Elections Are a Triumph for Its Left Wing Sheinbaum’s party Morena has consolidated its control over the country.
Demonstrators shouts slogans against the country’s first judicial elections, while holding signs that read in Spanish, “RIP Democracy” at a protest in Mexico City, Sunday, June 1, 2025.
MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's ruling Morena party is poised to control the country's Supreme Court, vote tallies of the country's first judicial election indicated Tuesday, inching the party closer ...
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum called her country's judicial election 'extraordinary,' despite turnout of less than 13%. Mexico becomes the first country on Earth to elect all its judges ...
MEXICO CITY—Former Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador set the stage for Sunday’s unprecedented election to choose judges and Supreme Court justices. He left it to his son to pull ...
Around 13% of Mexicans likely turned out to vote in the country's first-ever judicial election, Mexico's INE electoral authority said on Monday, as the government hailed a successful process while ...
Nearly 90 percent of voters did not cast ballots on Sunday, one of the lowest turnouts in any federal election since Mexico became a democracy.
The future of Mexico’s judiciary was decided by a small minority of voters after an unprecedented election of federal judges, including all members of the nation’s top court.
Mexico is holding its first ever judicial elections. Polls have closed and poll workers began counting colored ballots Sunday night with the question hanging in the air of what will become of ...
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico held its first-ever judicial elections Sunday, stirring controversy and sowing confusion among voters who struggled to understand a process set to transform the country ...
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