Mireya Cuéllar
Correspondent
La Jornada newspaper
Saturday, October 4, 2025, p. 4
Tijuana, BC., In the face of corruption accusations against certain political actors of Morena “it is not a moral conviction that is required, but a much more radical transformation of institutions that put us counterweights, that attenu of that game.
I reluctant to comment on the cases of Senator Adam Augusto López and Deputy Araceli Brown Figueredo, former leader of the Barzón – one of the great social movements against the fobaproa – said that it is the legislators and governments emanating from Morena who have to reform the institutions in anti -corruption matters, because “the Mexican political system requires a shake, a reconstruction.”
The administration of President Claudia Sheinbaum began with “the first trilogy (reforms): non -re -election, the fight against electoral nepotism and, fortunately, the president already grabbed as a flag the suppression and eradication of the jurisdiction,” said Ramírez Cuéllar, who was in Tijuana to issue a conference before entrepreneurs of the construction branch.
These reforms, he said, are key to avoiding the predominance of castes that are eternalized in the legislative or government tasks and “another trilogy must come: a new audit system, of public money control (…) We need a reform that transparent how the resources of the Congress of the Union are used, clarity on spending (…) and a new national anti-corruption system in the country”.
On this new anti -corruption system, the former leader of Morena explained: “I think we must be the first to rebuild a system that combats corruption in institutions, in people, on public servants.”
