Some of these characters, such as the mayor of Cuauhtémoc, Sandra Cuevas, and the PAN mayor of Álvaro Obregón, Lía Limón, denounced that march attendees were threatened with being fired and taken away to attend.
“He couldn’t even fill the Zócalo by paying.” @PartidoMorenaMx is over, the reign of President @lopezobrador_ is over,” the mayor of Cuauhtémoc posted on Twitter.
“To all those workers, merchants and beneficiaries of social programs who had to go to the #MarchaDelAcarreo due to the threat of losing their job, program or trade permit, don’t worry that in 2024 together we will build another story in #CDMX” , published Lía Limón, who aspires to be a candidate for head of government of CDMX.
To all those workers, merchants and beneficiaries of social programs who had to go to the #MarchaDelAcarreo by the threat of losing your job, program or trade permit, do not worry that in 2024 together we will build another story in the #CDMX
— Lía Limón García (@lialimon)
November 27, 2022
While the national leader of the PAN, Marko Cortés, who described this mobilization as the “Carrying March”, denounced that the march was disorganized, between shoving and pulling.
The #MarchaDelAcarreo It’s just like your fourth-class government: completely disorganized, people threatened and who don’t know what they’re doing there, pushing, pulling, zero results, pure waste and diversion of public resources.
— Marko Cortés (@MarkoCortes)
November 27, 2022
Starting before 9 a.m., thousands of people gathered in Mexico City to walk together with the federal Executive along Paseo de la Reforma to end at a stage where he delivered his speech that lasted more than an hour and a half where he assured that “the majority of those who participated in the march are young”, so there is a generational change.