Mexico’s Constitutional Democracy Under Threat - The Judicial Overhaul Is Only the Beginning

The final act of Mexican President López Obrador will be in collaboration with the president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum and the newly elected Congress. Among other things, in a move that goes beyond anything found in other prominent backsliding states such as Hungary or Poland, it introduces the popula...

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Veröffentlicht in:Verfassungsblog 2024-09 (2366-7044)
Hauptverfasser: Mariana Velasco Rivera, Irene Parra Prieto, Jaime Olaiz-Gonzalez, Tom Gerald Daly
Format: Artikel
Sprache:ger
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Zusammenfassung:The final act of Mexican President López Obrador will be in collaboration with the president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum and the newly elected Congress. Among other things, in a move that goes beyond anything found in other prominent backsliding states such as Hungary or Poland, it introduces the popular election of all sitting judges across the Federal Judiciary, including Supreme Court Justices, every 9 and 12 years respectively. In an open letter, legal scholars, judges, policymakers and practitioners from various regions of the world have expressed deep concern over the potential consequences that the popular election of judges may have on judicial independence, the rule of law, and the safeguarding of rights and freedoms in Mexico.
ISSN:2366-7044
DOI:10.59704/f215c0a86deeaba0