what presumes
One of the letters that Alejandro Murat presumes is that while he was governor of Oaxaca, he managed to settle financial outstandings for 11.4 billion pesos, a debt that was inherited by the previous state government, and that the Ministry of Public Administration (SFP) has notified the liquidation of the same.
In his latest report, Murat also highlights that the state’s public debt decreased from 4.3% to 3.5%.
in the controversy
In 2015, Murat was embroiled in controversy after the American daily The New York Times revealed that his family owned several properties in the United States.
During the investigation, Alejandro Murat and his father sent letters to the newspaper in which they indicated that the family fortune “comes, in part, from inherited money”, and affirmed that several of the properties were owned by other relatives.
Already being governor, Murat had to face the damage left by the earthquake of September 2017, where 300,000 people were affected and that despite the delivery of support, some of them continue to wait for help.
Murat has also received several criticisms due to the femicide violence that prevails in the state and that is that according to several organizations, in Oaxaca, as of this month of November there have already been 700 femicides that have occurred so far in the PRI government, regardless of the Alert for Gender Violence that exists in the entity since August 31, 2018.
heading to 2024
The governor of Oaxaca, the PRI member Alejandro Murat Hinojosa, announced several months ago that he would seek his candidacy for the presidency of Mexico towards the 2024 elections.
Just this October 19, at the “Dialogues for Mexico” event that led to a “catwalk” of PRI presidential hopefuls, Murat said he was ready to “keep dreaming.”
“Forcibly and without hesitation, I aspire to be my party’s candidate for the Presidency of the Republic, that is why we are here today,” said Murat, who will leave the state governorship on November 30.
Sunday June 2, 2024 are the next presidential elections in Mexico; It is estimated that millions of Mexicans go to the polls to choose who will be the next president of the country, successor to Andrés Manuel López Obrador.