Negotiations for the approval of the Electoral Reform in both chambers of the Union's Congress continue, and tension has increased in the ruling coalition after both the Labor Party (PT) and the Green Party (PVEM) warned Morena that its vote is not guaranteed. For the dozen constitutional changes that will require all the votes of the 4T's legislative coalition, the PT would have given in after the meeting between Beto Anaya and Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez. Neither of the two profiles, for different reasons (nepotism and low score in voting intention), have the approval of Morena's national leadership led by Luisa María Alcalde, nor from the National Palace. In that tone, the same consulted sources add, the request launched by the Green Party from the Senate of the Republic must be read: that the Morena coordinator, the Tabasco native Adán Augusto López, is not a valid interlocutor in the negotiations. In the Jucopo, the AMLO operators, asking for their names not to be mentioned, assure that the PT is seeking the governorship of Zacatecas. If such a request is fulfilled, the beneficiary might be the Morena senator Saúl Monreal, from the Monreal dynasty, who was already discarded by his party from being a candidate in 2027 for the governorship due to the anti-nepotism rule that directly impacted his aspirations. Zacatecas for the PT, on one hand, while San Luis Potosí and Quintana Roo for the Green Party. "The meeting was the willingness to sit down to dialogue, to build a project, an initiative that is just being built," they stated. However, in the opinion of the coordinator of the PT group in San Lázaro, it is not quite like that.
Tension in Mexico's Ruling Coalition Over Electoral Reform
Tension is rising in Mexico's ruling coalition over negotiations for the Electoral Reform. The Labor and Green Parties have warned Morena that its vote is not guaranteed, jeopardizing the passage of key constitutional changes.