News

The Morena party controls most of Mexico’s government. Its sway over the Supreme Court is set to increase after a judicial ...
Voting in Mexico is not mandatory and there is no minimum turnout required to legitimize an election. Pollsters had warned of poor turnout over boycott calls by the opposition and the complexity ...
"They're going to vote blind." Voting is not mandatory in Mexico and there is no minimum turnout required to legitimize an election. Just 37% of 1,000 people polled by Buendia & Marquez said they ...
Monterrey, Mexico ... the elections would lead to unqualified candidates taking office. Under the new regulations, candidates must have a law degree, experience in legal affairs, no criminal ...
Judicial workers protest the government's judicial reform, which would make judges stand for election ... There is no denying Mexico’s courts have flaws and need improvement.
The election appeared to get off to a slow start. Some voting centers in Mexico City, the Gulf coast state of Veracruz and the southern state of Chiapas opened with no one or only a handful of ...
For the first time in history, voters in Mexico will cast ... voter turnout on election night. Results are expected within days. An’s Dry Cleaning named the No. 1 ice cream shop in America ...
Mexico is holding its first ever judicial elections, which have stirred controversy and sowed confusion among voters as they struggle to understand a process set to transform the country’s court syste ...