Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Durango Metrobús poll results differ from president’s show of hands

The results of a polling agency’s survey were markedly different from those of an impromptu show-of-hands consultation conducted by President López Obrador over a planned infrastructure project in Durango.

A telephone poll by Massive Caller, a Mexican polling company, found that 63.1% of residents of the Laguna metropolitan area were in favor of continuing with a Metrobús project which the president promised to cancel after his impromptu consultation last Sunday.

The poll consulted 1,200 adult residents of the Coahuila municipalities of Torreón and Matamoros and the Durango municipalities of Gómez Palacio and Lerdo.

Support for the Metrobús was slightly lower in Gómez Palacio — where the show-of-hands vote took place —where 58.8% said they supported the project.

Rogelio Barrios, president of a Laguna chamber of commerce, said that in light of the poll the cancellation should be reconsidered because it will have a negative impact for the people who travel between the municipalities in the metropolitan area.

López Obrador announced he would pull federal funding for the Durango portion of the Metrobús after his consultation of people attending a rally in Gómez Palacio produced a strong show of opposition.

But he indicated later that he was open to a more formal consultation to determine whether the project should go ahead.

The Metrobús would connect the four municipalities and two states of the Laguna region with a 32.5-kilometer route, 31 stations and 525 vehicles, serving up to 170,000 trips daily.

Work on the Coahuila portions of the Metrobús, which represents 24.8 kilometers of the 32.5-kilometer route, is already 90% complete. The state government has said it plans to finish its section of the system regardless of whether the route will continue across the Nazas River into Durango.

The Metrobús is opposed by bus drivers who are concerned the new system won’t include them.

According to Massive Caller, the poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.4%.

Source: El Economista (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Black and white photos of Mexican tequileros caught on the border in Texas in the 1920s. The three tequileros are posed with two border authorities with the confiscated sacks of alcohol in front of them.

A look back at the days when tequila was the drug smuggled across the Mexico-US border

0
Prohibition launched the era of the tequileros, Mexican men from border towns who saw an opportunity to make a quick buck smuggling contraband alcohol into the U.S.
el Mencho

Here’s what to know about ‘El Mencho’ and the cartel he created

2
El Mencho forged his power by combining accelerated national expansion, large-scale diversification of criminal businesses (drugs, human traffic, extorsion, etc.) and brazen acts of violence toward the authorities.
INEGI, Mexico's official statistics agency, revisits its monthly and quarterly economic data to solidify the findings, and for the fourth quarter of 2025, the adjustment indicated that Mexico's 2025 GDP was a tick better than originally thought.

Revised figures boost Mexico’s 2025 GDP growth to 0.8%

0
The national statistics agency INEGI reported that Mexico’s gross domestic product (GDP) advanced 0.9% in Q4 2025 due to a favorable revision of primary activities, bringing final 2025 growth up from 0.7% to 0.8%.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity