Overview
- Senate commissions are reviewing the presidential initiative and plan expert consultations, while PRI leaders said they will boycott pro-government forums and oppose the bill.
- The draft codifies a definition of interés legítimo that requires a real, current, differentiated injury, which critics say would curtail indirect or collective claims.
- It creates new limits on suspensions, barring them for activities lacking permits, in cases tied to money laundering or terrorism, and to block UIF account freezes, including a ban on provisional suspensions in those cases.
- The initiative cites more than 3,600 amparos against UIF freezes from December 2018 to August 2025, with 1,407 suspensions unblocking 27 billion pesos and final rulings unblocking 32 billion.
- Procedural changes include firm deadlines, curtailed recusals and dilatory tactics, optional digital filings with transition periods, mechanisms to claim impossibility of compliance with rulings, and new limits on fiscal remedies against firm tax credits.