Posted on November 24, 2008 by mexicoinstitute
El Universal, 11/24/2008
Five days after handing over the presidency of the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) to Jesús Ortega, Guadalupe Acosta accused Andrés Manuel López Obrador of encouraging a climate of hate in the PRD and completely dismissing those who do not think like him.
Read more…
Filed under: Politics and Elections | Tagged: Alejandro Encinas, AMLO, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, Guadalupe Acosta, Jesus Ortega, Left, Mexico, PRD | Leave a Comment »
Posted on November 24, 2008 by mexicoinstitute
Financial Times, 11/24/2008
Mexican authorities said at the weekend there was no sign “so far” that a high-ranking police officer under investigation had leaked information from Interpol’s database to a Mexican drugs cartel. Fears grew last week that sensitive information on criminal gangs held on the international police organisation’s computers had been tapped after the arrest [...]
Filed under: Security and the Rule of Law | Tagged: Drug trafficking, Gangs, Interpol, Mexico, Ricardo Gutierrez Vargas, Rule of Law, Security | Leave a Comment »
Posted on November 24, 2008 by mexicoinstitute
El Universal, 11/24/2008
The PRD will enter the 2009 electoral season with a polarized party with a fundamental disagreement about the role of the left in Mexico and lingering questions about its governing abilities. The PRD’s strategy next year will be to consolidate an alliance with NGOs, non-government affiliated unions, campesinos, and the “progressive” left wing, [...]
Filed under: Politics and Elections | Tagged: 2009 election, Left, Mexican elections, Mexico, PRD | Leave a Comment »
Posted on November 24, 2008 by mexicoinstitute
The Associated Press, 11/24/2008
A gang of drug hitmen is leaving funeral wreaths with death threats directed at local policemen in the northern Mexico city of Hermosillo. State police say six of the wreaths were left on the city’s streets, along with hand-lettered posters signed by the Gulf drug cartel. One of the signs found on [...]
Filed under: Security and the Rule of Law | Tagged: Death threats, Drug trafficking, Mexico, Police | Leave a Comment »
Posted on November 24, 2008 by mexicoinstitute
New York Times, 11/24/2008
Just off the highway in the scrubby hills north of town stands a walk-in shrine to a man known as the “narco saint,” Jesús Malverde, a Robin Hood-like bandit who is said in Mexican lore to have performed miracles for the desperate after he was hanged in 1909.
The “saint” — he is [...]
Filed under: Politics and Elections, Security and the Rule of Law | Tagged: Baja California, Drug trafficking, Mexico | Leave a Comment »
Posted on November 24, 2008 by mexicoinstitute
Milenio, 11/24/2008
Even though he said he does not know the details of president-elect Barack Obama’s economic plan, President Felipe Calderón suggested that the plan will help not only the United States, but will serve Mexico as well. His Finance Minister Agustín Carstens added that the most important variable in determining Mexico’s growth next year will [...]
Filed under: Economic Integration | Tagged: Agustín Carstens, Barack Obama, Felipe Calderon, Mexican economy, stimulus package | Leave a Comment »
Posted on November 24, 2008 by mexicoinstitute
Associated Press, 11/24/2008
As the United States economic crisis worsens, the money that Mexicans living here send home to their families has declined — reaching record lows over the summer. But the Mexican government has long known that the day would come when the historic migration North would slow, and the remittance revenue stream — Mexico’s [...]
Filed under: Migration and Migrants | Leave a Comment »
Posted on November 24, 2008 by mexicoinstitute
New York Times, 11/24/2008
Here comes Abraham Franco now, 86 years old, skin leathery and bronzed from decades of work in the fields, slowly bending his small but sturdy frame into a metal chair at a faux wood office table at the Mexican Consulate here. He still could not quite believe the news: Decades after working [...]
Filed under: Migration and Migrants | Leave a Comment »