In the presidential palace, a version is growing about a possible understanding between the Labor Party (PT) and the Green Party towards the creation of a third force that would unite petistas and greens, caught between the Morenist officialism and the opposition of the PAN and the PRI. According to this version, which a federal official shared with LPO on condition of anonymity, there is a fear in the presidency that the PT and the Green Party may seek their independence from the 4T, reinforcing the idea that they are very valuable and casting doubt on the contrary, that their political capital is owed to obradorismo. Sheinbaum dismissed that promoting the recall of the mandate is a campaign in favor of Morena. According to the same source, both federal deputy Beto Anaya and senator Manuel Velasco signed the 'Plan B' document with Morena's Luisa María Alcalde, all in favor, although now they cannot guarantee that their party caucuses will vote that way. In contrast, there are already some among the parliamentary groups who assure that if the PT and the Green Party rebel, they could join Citizen's Movement and thus create a real counterweight to Morena and Claudia Sheinbaum, displacing the classic opposition and prematurely retiring the PANist Jorge Romero and the PRIist Alito Moreno Cárdenas. Also in the National Palace, they are not backing down on moving the recall of the mandate to 2027 because precisely the appearance of Sheinbaum Pardo's name on the ballot could impose Morena by force above all parties, demonstrating what the Morenists so boast: the PT and the Green Party are strong because of the 4T, without it they are satellite parties of the current regime. 'The PT cannot walk along this path of the electoral reform initiative,' declared last week the legislator and leader of the Labor Party (PT), Benjamín Robles Montoya. All of this would have an explanation. 'To us, that seems inequitable for all political parties, including those of us who are part of the 4T. So we are not going to go down that road.' This Monday, the Constitutional Points and Legislative Studies Commissions of the Senate of the Republic announced that there is no set date to begin the approval process for the so-called 'Plan B,' because they are in a process of analysis and receiving some observations that governors and INE counselors have sent them. The messages that the leadership of the Labor Party has made public do not anticipate a happy ending for the new constitutional reforms proposed by President Claudia Sheinbaum after the failure of 'Plan A' (the Electoral Reform) in the Chamber of Deputies.
PT and Green Party Consider Creating a Third Political Force in Mexico
A version is growing in Mexico about a possible alliance between the Labor Party (PT) and the Green Party. This alliance could lead to the creation of a powerful third political force, posing a challenge to the ruling Morena party and the traditional opposition. The decision on this matter is expected to depend on further negotiations and political calculations.