Mexico’s ruling party slated to control the newly elected Supreme Court, vote tallies show
By MEGAN JANETSKY and MARÍA VERZA
June 3, 2025
https://apnews.com/article/mexico-judicial-election-supreme-court-6f80e045ca06d601f8602e7d68dfd502
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s ruling
Morena party is poised to control the country’s Supreme Court, vote tallies
of the country’s first judicial
election indicated
Tuesday, inching the party closer toward a grip on all three branches of
government.
Votes were still being counted for the majority of the
2,600 federal, state and local judge positions up for grabs in Sunday’s
elections, but results neared completion for the nine Supreme Court positions.
The majority of the newly elected justices share
strong ties and ideological alignments with the ruling party, shifting a once
fairly balanced high court into the hands of the very party that overhauled the
judicial system to elect judges for the first time.
Experts warned the shift would undercut checks and
balances in the Latin American nation, and would offer President Claudia Sheinbaum and her party an easier path to push through
their agenda.
“We’re watching as power is falling almost entirely
into the hands of one party,” said Georgina De la Fuente, election specialist
with the Mexican consulting firm Strategia Electoral. “There isn’t any balance
of power.”
Despite that, officials have continued to fiercely
reject democratic concerns.
A Morena-leaning court and an Indigenous justice
With more than 98% of votes counted Tuesday night,
most of those slated to head Mexico’s highest court were members or former
members of the Morena party. A number of them who were Supreme Court justices
prior to the election were appointed by former President Andrés Manuel López
Obrador, Sheinbaum’s mentor who pushed through the judicial overhaul last year.
Others were advisers to the former president or the party or campaigned with
politically aligned visions for the judiciary.
Mexico’s top electoral authority listed the nine
likely winners in a press conference on Tuesday afternoon.
Not all of the prospective winners were explicitly
aligned with Morena. One standout was Hugo Aguilar Ortiz, an Indigenous lawyer
from the southern state of Oaxaca. He has no clear party affiliation, though
Sheinbaum said repeatedly she hoped to have an Indigenous judge on the court
and said on Tuesday she was happy to see he would be.
Political controversy
Critics had feared that Morena would emerge from the election with
control of the judiciary.
The vote came after months of fierce debate, prompted
when López Obrador and the party jammed through the reforms for judges to be elected instead of being
appointed based on merits. The overhaul will notably limit the Supreme Court as a counterweight to the president.
Judges, experts and the political opposition say the
reform was an attempt to take advantage of high popularity levels to stack
courts in favor of Morena. Sheinbaum and her mentor have insisted that electing
judges will root out corruption in a system most Mexicans agree is broken.
On Tuesday, Sheinbaum brushed off complaints by
Mexico’s opposition — which called for a boycott of the vote — that the Supreme
Court was now unfairly stacked against them, saying “they’re the ones who
decided not to participate in the election.”
The elections were marred by low participation — about 13% — and
confusion by voters
who struggled to understand the new system, something opponents quickly latched
onto as a failure.
De la Fuente said Morena is likely to use its new lack
of a counterweight in the high court to push through rounds of reforms,
including reforms to Mexico’s electoral systems, a proposal that has stirred
controversy and was previously blocked by courts.
Guadalupe Taddei Zavala, chief counselor of Mexico’s
electoral authority, on Tuesday rejected democratic concerns. “I don’t see any
(constitutional) crisis after the election,” she said.
Likely Supreme Court justices
— Hugo Aguilar Ortiz was the big surprise from the
election. The Indigenous lawyer led all vote-getters, including several sitting
Supreme Court justices. He’s known as a legal activist fighting for the rights
of Indigenous Mexicans and has criticized corruption in the judiciary.
— Lenia Batres was already a Supreme Court justice and
was appointed by López Obrador. Previously a congresswoman, she’s a member of
Morena and an ally of Mexico’s president.
— Yasmín Esquivel is a Supreme Court justice who was
appointed by López Obrador. She focused her campaign on modernizing the justice
system and has pushed for gender equality. She was at the center of a 2022
controversy when she was accused of plagiarizing her thesis. She is considered
an ally of the Morena party.
— Loretta Ortiz is a justice on the Supreme Court who
was appointed by López Obrador. She also served in Congress and resigned from
Morena in 2018 in a show of independence as a judge. She’s considered an ally
of the party.
— María Estela Ríos González is a lawyer who acted as
legal adviser to López Obrador, first when he was mayor of Mexico City and
later when he became president. She has a long history as a public servant and
works in labor law and on a number of Indigenous issues.
— Giovanni Figueroa Mejía is a lawyer from the Pacific
coast state of Nayarit with a doctorate in constitutional law. He works as an
academic at the Iberoamericana University in Mexico City. He’s worked in human
rights. While he holds no clear party affiliation, he supported the judicial
overhaul, saying in an interview with his university that it “was urgent and
necessary in order to rebuild” the judiciary.
— Irving Espinosa Betanzo is a magistrate on Mexico
City’s Supreme Court and has previously worked as a congressional adviser to
Morena. He campaigned for the country’s highest court on a platform of
eliminating nepotism and corruption and pushing for human rights.
— Arístides Rodrigo Guerrero García is a law professor pushing for social welfare
with no experience as a judge, but who has worked as a public servant and has
experience in both constitutional and parliamentary law. He gained traction in
campaigns for a social media video of him claiming he’s “more prepared than a
pork rind.”
— Sara Irene Herrerías Guerra is a prosecutor
specializing in human rights for Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office. She’s
worked on issues like gender equality, sexually transmitted infections and
human trafficking. In 2023, she worked on the investigation of a fire in an
immigration facility in
the border city of Ciudad Juárez that killed 40 migrants.
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