Investigations in Tabasco and Chiapas Regarding Violence

The prosecutors' offices of Tabasco and Chiapas have begun investigations into violence on the roads, including an assault on a public official. Representatives of Morena also demonstrated in Washington. Reforms for security in the country were discussed.


Investigations in Tabasco and Chiapas Regarding Violence

The district attorneys of Tabasco and Chiapas are already conducting investigations related to violent crimes, with the promise of not allowing impunity in any case.

Amid the celebrations in the streets of Washington for President Trump's inauguration, a representative from the Morena New York Committee 1 was also present. This organization, which previously protested against Xóchitl Gálvez's visit, has shown strong support for the ruling party from the United States.

"We know that the second term could be as intense or more intense than the previous one," warned Beatriz Castañón Félix, the municipal president of Balancán, Tabasco, after being assaulted by five armed men on the Escárcega-Villahermosa highway.

It is undeniable that the roads in Mexico are unsafe, and no one is safe from criminals who rob anyone they encounter in their way.

A dialogue process has begun across the country by federal deputies from Morena to inform the population in different states about the reforms approved by the 'fourth transformation' movement. Ricardo Monreal, the Morena leader in San Lázaro, mentioned that reforms are being implemented to strengthen national security and ensure social peace.

Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida, issued an executive order warning about a low-pressure system that will bring severe cold to the state, calling this phenomenon from the "Gulf of America," a name proposed by Trump for the Gulf of Mexico.

The Morena bench in the Senate plans to break with the traditional plenary meetings before the start of the regular session period. Gerardo Fernández Noroña and Adán Augusto López have commented on the absence of plenaries, indicating that the agenda is already clear with 60 reforms to secondary laws proposed since the last administration.