Overview
- The president released a video thanking citizens on the one‑year anniversary of her administration and invited the public to a mass report in Mexico City’s Zócalo on Sunday, October 5.
- Morena and its allies urged attendance and showcased unity, touting a roughly 30–32% decline in intentional homicides and highlighting passage of numerous legal changes, including 19 constitutional reforms and updates to more than 40 laws.
- Finance Secretary Édgar Amador Zamora said the government expanded social programs and investment without a fiscal reform, pledged no cuts to sensitive areas, cited stronger tax and customs collection, and projected a 2025 deficit of 4.3% of GDP with public debt near 52.3% of GDP.
- Sheinbaum presented a proposed decree to overhaul national water management that would end transfers of concessions between private parties, restrict changes in water use, and establish water‑related criminal offenses.
- Coparmex in Michoacán warned that the proposed reform to the Ley de Amparo would digitalize procedures, tighten filing requirements, limit provisional suspensions, and shorten resolution times, raising concerns about access to judicial relief and business continuity.