First modification:
The presidents of the Foreign Relations committees of the United States Congress estimated that the approval of the reform of the electoral authority in Mexico “endangers the future of democratic institutions.” They also denounced “the repeated attempts by President López Obrador to sabotage Mexico’s democratic institutions.”
The reform reduces the payroll and budget of the National Electoral Institute (INE), which organizes the elections and which Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador accuses of being onerous and of having tolerated fraud in the past.
With the approval of this reform, “the Mexican Congress has endangered the future of the democratic institutions of its country,” affirms the text signed by the Democrat Bob Menéndez, president of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and the Republican Michael McCaul. , at the head of the same commission in the House of Representatives.
The initiative takes Mexico back “to its dark past of elections controlled by the president, not only turning back the clock of its democracy, but also that of relations between our countries,” he adds.
The two prominent congressmen reject “repeated attempts by President López Obrador to sabotage Mexico’s democratic institutions.”
The Mexican people deserve, in his opinion, an “electoral authority that is independent and capable of conducting free and fair elections and being governed by leaders who respect the rule of law.”
Menéndez and McCaul believe that López Obrador, with whom the government of US President Joe Biden has a good relationship, hopes “to be remembered as a Democrat and defender of the most vulnerable”, but his “continuous efforts” to “break autonomy and independence of the INE will certainly cement its heritage as the complete opposite”.