Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Government workers in four states protest unpaid salaries, bonuses

State government employees and teachers in Baja California, Tabasco, Hidalgo and Chiapas took to the streets this week, protesting unpaid salaries and year-end bonuses.

The largest protest took place in Hidalgo where 14,400 retired teachers have yet to receive their yearly bonus of 6,500 pesos (US $325).

Authorities explained that they are in arrears for 100 million pesos but have no money.

In protest, the retired teachers set up at least 20 roadblocks on highways around the state at 9:00am yesterday and maintained them for the next 10 hours.

Also yesterday, thousands of government workers in the Baja California cities of Mexicali, Tijuana and Ensenada occupied several government facilities to demand payment of their aguinaldo, or year-end bonus.

Spokesman Lázaro Mosqueda explained that some 2,500 employees and 2,000 retired workers protested when the bonuses were not paid by the December 20 deadline.

The secretary of the government workers’ union in Baja California, Arturo Gutiérrez, said there were about 4,000 active workers in the state who have yet to receive the payments.

In Tabasco there were four days of protests by state government workers, teachers, health and education administrative staff and retirees, who mounted eight roadblocks around the city of Villahermosa for up to nine hours at a time.

The protesters said they will resume their demonstrations if the money has not been paid by December 27.

In Chiapas, teachers at the state-run Cobach preparatory schools protested yesterday outside the governor’s offices in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, demanding the payment of their bonuses and salaries owed since December 15.

Teachers’ union leader Víctor Manuel Pinot Juárez said more than 7,500 teachers are affected, and that 200 million pesos (US $10 million) is owed.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
sheinbaum and formal employment graphic

Formal employment in Mexico is up 2.7%, hitting record of 22.8M workers

0
IMSS director general Zoé Robledo said the increase in formal employment in 2025 should be seen as “a sign of resilience in the labor market,” which had shown signs of deterioration earlier in the year.
President Sheinbaum's sky-high approval rating is under pressure from recent events in Michoacán.

Sheinbaum’s approval rating drops 9 points amid security challenges

2
At 74%, Sheinbaum's approval rating is the lowest detected by the eight national polls conducted by Enkoll since Oct. 1, 2024, and indicative of a difficult November for the president.
car bomb in Michoacán

Car bomb targeting community police station kills 6 in Michoacán

1
The explosion of a car bomb outside a community police station in the town of Coahuayana, Michoacán, on Saturday killed six people, including at least three police officers.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity