“Right now we are with this,” declared the PRI member. “There is no plan B, nor C, nor D. You have to wait for it to arrive, there is none,” he said at the end of the press conference for the “reunion” of Va por México and when responding to possible amendments to secondary laws, such as those raised by the president.
The opposition coalition went on hiatus on September 7, after the PRI supported the extension of the use of the Armed Forces in security tasks until 2028, thereby violating the constitutional moratorium that Va por México had declared.
Just over two months later, the parliamentary coordinators reappeared together at a press conference in the Chamber of Deputies. They insisted that they have “had breakfast together many times” and there was no distancing. However, they accepted that Va por México is “reunited”.
Moreira, from the PRI, clarified once again that his party and its leader Alejandro Moreno did not betray anyone with their vote on security.
“The facts are love, we are together making it clear that in the constitutional electoral reform we are not going. And that is a concrete fact that we are declaring publicly”, assured the coordinator of the National Action (PAN) legislators, Jorge Romero Herrera.
“That it is not intended to tie knives, what is seen is not judged, here we are together. We are going to go together, we want to go to Coahuila and the State of Mexico together. The previous situation is over because there is something greater ahead, a reform that seeks democratic regression and we are not going to allow it”, declared the leader of the representatives of the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD), Luis Ángel Espinosa Cházaro.
The three ruled out having signed to vote together in rejection of the electoral reform, since there is a verbal commitment.
Only the PRD guaranteed that they will go together in the Va por México coalition electorally, for the 2023 local elections.