Latest news with #Ciudad de México


Bloomberg
07-08-2025
- Business
- Bloomberg
Mexico's Sheinbaum Finds Unlikely Ally in Young Heir to Corn-Flour Fortune
Leer en español Days after winning Mexico's presidential election last year, Claudia Sheinbaum tried to calm traders who were dumping their pesos. Investors feared what her left-leaning party would do with its almost perfect victory—her coalition had also won most state governorships and congressional seats. She sat down with executives from BlackRock Inc., the world's largest money manager, and Altagracia Gómez Sierra, the then 32-year-old heir to a corn-flour fortune. Gómez Sierra has become Sheinbaum's guide to the world of commerce, an unlikely ally for a party that rails against what it calls the 'mafia of power.' She chairs Promotora Empresarial de Occidente SA (Business Promoter of the West), a family enterprise with interests in agrochemicals, consumer goods, transportation and real estate. Its shares of publicly traded Grupo Minsa SAB de CV, a seller of corn flour for tortillas, are alone worth more than $200 million. Uncommonly young and outspoken for Mexico's business world, known for its aging crop of billionaires, Gómez Sierra plays up her difference with long eyelashes, floor-length dresses and glimmering headbands that, if you squint, look like tiaras.


Washington Post
02-06-2025
- General
- Washington Post
Mexico's first judicial elections are marked by low turnout, confusion and disillusionment
MEXICO CITY — Mexico held its first-ever judicial elections Sunday, stirring controversy and sowing confusion among voters who struggled to understand a process set to transform the country's court system . Polls closed and poll workers began counting colored ballots Sunday night with the question hanging in the air of what will become of Mexico's judiciary, the answer to which will only emerge in the coming days as results roll in.


Washington Post
01-06-2025
- General
- Washington Post
Mexico's first judicial elections stir controversy and confusion among voters
MEXICO CITY — Mexico is holding its first ever judicial elections on Sunday, stirring controversy and sowing confusion among voters still struggling to understand a process set to transform the country's court system . Mexico's ruling party, Morena, overhauled the court system late last year, fueling protests and criticism that the reform is an attempt by those in power to seize on their political popularity to gain control of the branch of government until now out of their reach.