Despite being prohibited in the Constitution since 2008, the federal Executive revived the so-called “pocket veto” on 16 reform decrees that the Congress of the Union approved a month ago, because it has a political calculation, stated the parliamentary coordinators of the PAN, PRI and PRD in the Chamber of Deputies.
At a press conference in the Senate, headquarters of the Permanent Commission, Rubén Moreira reported that, strangely, the federal Executive has postponed without explanation the publication of decrees that were supposedly urgent for them.
Together with Jorge Romero, leader of the PAN deputies, Rubén Moreira said that once the reforms to protection and amnesty are published, which are some of those delayed by the federal Executive, they will be immediately challenged in a timely manner before the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation.
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On Friday, Excelsior revealed that there are 16 decrees that the federal Executive has detained and has not published in the Official Journal of the Federation; of which three must have already been published by order of the Permanent Commission of the Congress of the Union, given that all constitutional deadlines have already expired.
However, yesterday, the president of the Permanent Commission, Ana Lilia Rivera, did not issue any order for the reforms that the federal Executive has had since April 10 to come into force.
The opposition parliamentary coordinators in the Chamber of Deputies explained that they are cautious in demanding that the federal Executive or the Permanent Commission publish the decrees that it has stopped, because the ruling party is an expert in distorting reality and they do not want them to use a pretext to attribute a responsibility to the opposition that it does not have.
Rubén Moreira and Jorge Romero made it clear that they are already preparing unconstitutionality actions against the decree that mutilates the right of protection, by eliminating the provisional suspension and its general effects, and against the President of the Republic having the power to release prisoners that he considers, without going through any other instance of the Mexican State.
The topics of those three decrees that the federal Executive did not publish and the deadlines have already expired; They are reforms to promote in minors the culture of respect for the environment and animals; the inclusive language in the Immigration Law and the updating of federal agency regulations in the Foreign Investment Law.
On Thursday, May 23, the presidential veto deadline for the reform regarding Mexican nationality accreditation documents expired, since the federal Executive has had it since April 23 and now has until June 2 to publish it; If not, the Congress of the Union will order its promulgation.
On Friday, May 24, the 30-day period expired for the Federal Executive to make observations on the reform of the Amparo Law, Regulating Articles 103 and 107 of the Political Constitution of the United Mexican States regarding “suspension of claimed act and unconstitutionality of general norms”, which generated a strong and extensive discussion and criticism, because various specialists consider it the de facto annulment of the progress in matters of protection that Mexico had since 2011, in protection of minorities who cannot access the protection.
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2024-05-29 20:24:28