AMLO’s agenda for September 30
On Monday, September 30, López Obrador will hold a meeting with his security cabinet at 6:00 a.m.
At 7:00 in the morning he will lead his last morning conference from the National Palace. According to him, that day, the federal president will present a report on his management.
He explained that it will not last more than 10 minutes and stated that it is better to be quick. “Talk quickly, because if not, it will take us a long time. So just 10 minutes,” he explained.
After presenting said report, it is expected that I will answer one or two questions from reporters and then offer a celebration.
This celebration will be a breakfast with your work team, plus the press that covered your conference every morning will join in. There will be tamales and jarocha music to entertain, he revealed.
Later, he will unveil his official photo as the 65th president in the history of Mexico and will hold a raffle for one of his watches.
At noon he will have a lunch with heads of state at the National Palace, in which he will address cooperation in the region.
After dinner, the president will go to sleep, although he will no longer spend the night in the National Palace.
Although everything has already been defined about what López Obrador’s last day of government will be like, this weekend he still has several activities scheduled.
On Saturday, September 28, he will travel to Nayarit to inaugurate and champion the Boca de Chila naval sector and on Sunday, September 29, he will be in Quintana Roo to inaugurate the Chetumal station of the Mayan Train.
Inauguration of Claudia Sheinbaum
On Tuesday morning, López Obrador will hand over the presidential sash to Claudia Sheinbaum, who will be sworn in as Mexico’s first president.
At 9:00 in the morning, the investiture ceremony will begin in the Congress of the Union, located in the Legislative Palace of San Lázaro in Mexico City.
Later, at 4:00 p.m., Sheinbaum will go to the Zócalo to begin the “Second Floor of Transformation.”
It is also expected that at this event, he will be given the Staff of Command, which for some years now the indigenous peoples of several Latin American countries have given to new presidents who are committed to these ethnic groups long forgotten by other governments.