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The runup to the 2021 legislative election in Mexico was filled with political assassinations. More than 91 politicians were killed, 14 of them being candidates. This political violence led to the 2021 elections being labeled as the second most deadly election since the year 2000. [53]
Yet Mexico remains a dangerous place to be a woman: it has sky-high femicide rates with around 10 women murdered in Mexico every day. Supporters of Claudia Sheinbaum celebrate during an election ...
Restaurant owners in Mexico City, the State of Mexico, hold cacerolazos (protest involving the beating of kitchen utensils) against the closure of restaurants. 13,500 restaurants in Mexico City [8] and 10,000 in the State of Mexico [9] have closed since the beginning of the pandemic. Restaurants and similar establishments are believed to be ...
Mexican Online News [citation needed] El Mexicano [1] Tijuana, Baja California [6] Mexico News Daily [20] Daily Puerto Escondito, Oaxaca [21] 2014 Milenio: Daily Milenio (Monterrey) [5] Daily Nuevo León [3] Mural: Guadalajara, [6] Jalisco My Press: Mexico City [3] El Nacional [1] Guanajuato El Nacional [citation needed] Mexico City The News ...
[24] January 23 – Nineteen burned bodies are found in Camargo Municipality, Tamaulipas, likely victims of drug violence. [25] January 24 – President López Obrador announces he has COVID-19. Interior Secretary Olga Sánchez Cordero will be taking over for him in his daily news conferences. [26] January 25
TOP-10 FOR THE MEXICAN GRAND PRIX: 23:10, Kieran Jackson. 1) Charles Leclerc. 2) Carlos Sainz. 3) Max Verstappen. 4) Daniel Ricciardo. 5) Sergio Perez. 6) Lewis Hamilton. 7) Oscar Piastri
The 2021 Mexican local elections, held on June 6, 2021, saw voters electing fifteen governors for six-year terms, deputies for thirty state congresses, and officials for 1,910 municipalities. [1] These elections took place concurrently with the country's federal legislative election .
Morning newscast Primero Noticias was replaced by three distinct programs: Las Noticias, an early round-up broadcast anchored by Danielle Dithurbide, Despierta, a longer-form, investigative journalism and opinion-focused broadcast anchored by Carlos Loret de Mola, and Al Aire, a lighter news magazine show with Paola Rojas.