8 of 11 members of Mexico's Supreme Court to resign in protest of
controversial judicial overhaul
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[October 31, 2024]
MEXICO CITY (AP) —
Eight justices of Mexico’s Supreme Court have said they will leave the
court rather than stand for election as required by a controversial
judicial overhaul passed last month. |

Supreme Court Justices, from left, Norma Lucia Pina, Jorge Mario Pardo,
Jose Ramon Cossio and Arturo Zaldivar meet at the Supreme Court in
Mexico City, Sept. 7, 2016. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte,File) |
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Supreme Court President Norma Piña and seven others submitted
letters Tuesday and Wednesday stating they would leave their
posts rather than compete in judicial elections scheduled for
next June.
The court’s three other justices have indicated they will
compete in the elections. Previously, the Supreme Court’s
justices were selected by the Senate.
Last month, Mexico’s Congress passed — and a majority of states
ratified — then-President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s
initiative to make all of the country’s judges subject to
election.
López Obrador and his allies, including his successor Claudia
Sheinbaum, have said the radical change will help rid the
judicial system of corruption. However, critics say the courts
will become less independent and more subject to political
forces.
The resignations came before the Congress’ lower chamber later
Wednesday passed yet another constitutional change that would
protect constitutional amendments like the judicial overhaul
from legal challenges. The Supreme Court is scheduled to take up
such a challenge in the coming the days.
The amendment passed with 343 votes in favor and 129 against.
The Senate had previously passed the legislation.
Business sectors in particular had voiced concerns that the
change would weaken the rule of law. The Mexican Employers’
Association, Coparmex, had said in a statement before the vote
that the initiative “puts at risk the fundamental guarantees
that have protected citizens for decades.”
López Obrador clashed throughout his six-year term with the
courts as they repeatedly knocked down some of his initiatives.
He railed against judges in his daily morning press briefings
and Sheinbaum, his protégé, has continued in a similar vein.
Sheinbaum had quipped Tuesday that if the Supreme Court justices
didn’t resign now before the close of judicial candidate
registration in November they could lose their pensions. “It’s a
lot of money,” she said.
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