The peso began to recover this week from its value dipped following Trump's tariff threats. (Shutterstock)
The peso strengthened for a third straight day against the U.S. dollar, recovering from Trump’s tariff threats as traders reacted to a weak U.S. jobs report.
Mexico’s currency was trading around 20.20 to the dollar just before noon on Thursday, a 0.49% increase according to the foreign exchange website FX Street. Dollars were being sold for 20.74 pesos at banks in Mexico, the newspaper El Financiero reported.
Although traders ignored Wednesday’s hawkish comments from U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, comments about inflation by the deputy governor of Mexico’s central bank (Banxico) might have slowed the peso’s rebound.
A day after Powell said the U.S. economy’s strength will allow the Fed to “proceed cautiously with interest rate cuts,” the U.S. Department of Labor reported a slight deterioration of the jobs market.
Along with the disappointing jobs report, data showing the U.S. trade deficit narrowed in October sent the dollar tumbling in global markets, according to FX Street.
Comments from Banxico Deputy Governor Irene Espinosa may have slowed the peso’s momentum. Espinosa said that if Mexico’s Congress approves a 12% increase to the minimum wage, Mexico would experience upward pressure on inflation in 2025.
Banxico Deputy Governor Irene Espinosa said the minimum wage increase could put inflationary pressure on the peso next year. (File photo)
Despite Powell’s hawkish stance, the financial services company CME Group suggests investors see a 70% chance that the Fed will cut interest rates by 25 basis points at its Dec. 17-18 meeting.
At the same, a Citi Mexico survey projects that Banxico will follow suit and cut rates by 25 basis points on Dec. 19.
The peso had depreciated to 20.71 to the dollar on Nov. 26, its weakest level since March 2022, after U.S. President-elect Donald Trump threatened to impose tariffs on Mexican imports.
Fears of a trade war were eased after Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum spoke to Trump the next day, prompting the peso’s gradual recovery, according to the website Trading Economics.
Despite the bounce-back, the peso is about 20% weaker year-on-year, hamstrung by concerns over the Mexican government’s spending and its budget deficit.
After one of his agents was targetted and killed, García Harfuch retruned to oversee the state's security operations. (Galo Cañas/Cuartoscuro)
Almost three months after a long-running feud between rival factions of the Sinaloa Cartel escalated into a full-blown war, Security Minister Omar García Harfuch has arrived in Sinaloa to coordinate the security strategy in the violence-plagued northern state.
On Wednesday, García admitted that there is no silver bullet to the violence in Sinaloa, but emphasized that the government is committed to bringing peace to the state no matter how long it takes.
A conflict between rival factions of the Sinaloa Cartel came to a head in September, causing an escalation in murders, disappearances and kidnappings, especially in the area surrounding the state capital of Culiacán. (José Betanzos/Cuartoscuro)
The violence, he said, “won’t be resolved from one day to the next.”
Sheinbaum: García will seek to improve security strategy in Sinaloa
President Claudia Sheinbaum announced Wednesday that García traveled to Sinaloa on Tuesday.
“He will be there a few days with a special team from the Ministry of the Defense and the Ministry of the Navy,” she told reporters at her morning press conference.
She said that García will help “local forces to coordinate in a better way the [security] strategy in Sinaloa.”
Authorities seized over 1 tonne of fentanyl in Sinaloa on Tuesday, a record-breaking bust. (Omar García Harfuch/X)
García announced the bust as well as the arrest of two men on social media, and declared that “these actions will continue until violence decreases in the state of Sinaloa.”
At her Wednesday morning press conference, Sheinbaum also conceded that violence in Sinaloa won’t “drastically decrease” in a short period of time.
But it will decline, she pledged before emphasizing the importance of a coordinated security plan and reiterating the four pillars of the federal government’s strategy, namely attention to the root causes of crime; consolidation of the National Guard; strengthening of investigative and intelligence practices; and coordination between authorities at all levels of government.
“In Sinaloa, in particular, we took the decision for the minister to go there for a period to guarantee this coordination with Army and Navy forces,” Sheinbaum said.
Sinaloa and federal authorities will maintain ‘permanent coordination,’ says governor
García met with Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya in Culiacán on Wednesday morning to discuss the current security strategy in the state.
Rocha, who has faced criticism over his management of the security crisis in Sinaloa, said that he and García spoke about “the special strategy for Sinaloa” and about “the presence” the federal security minister “will personally have in the state.”
Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya has faced criticism for his handling, and minimization, of Sinaloa’s ongoing cartel war. (Gobierno de Sinaloa)
The governor said they evaluated the security operations that have already been carried out, and declared that state and federal authorities “will be in close permanent coordination in order to strengthen security for the good of Sinaloa residents.”
“El Mayo” Zambada claimed in August that Guzmán López lured him to a property in Culiacán on July 25 on the pretext that he would help resolve a dispute between Rocha and former Culiacán Mayor Héctor Cuén over who should head up the Autonomous University of Sinaloa.
Cuén was allegedly killed at the property where Zambada was supposedly kidnapped. Rocha has denied that he was at the property, or that he had any knowledge of the meeting.
García: Pacifying Sinaloa will take ‘as long as necessary’
After his meeting with Rocha, García told a press conference that Sheinbaum gave him the instruction to “review, supervise and coordinate” the security strategy in Sinaloa and ultimately “pacify” the state.
Asked how long pacification of the state would take, he responded:
“I can give you an answer that won’t be very popular: as long as necessary.”
“The important thing,” García continued, is that security authorities are present in the state and ready to “combat violence.”
“Citizens have to be clear about who their allies are. The authorities are the allies of citizens,” he said.
“… We’re going to work every day to reduce violence and actions such as the confiscation of fentanyl won’t stop,” García said.
The security minister emphasized that “narcoblockades” of roads have diminished, and that the National Guard will increase surveillance of the state’s highways. (José Betanzos/Cuartoscuro)
“A lot of the time we can’t prevent terrible acts like homicides, robberies, … there are things that are beyond our reach … [but] what is within our reach is to prevent [crimes] from going unpunished. That is the task, that is the instruction,” he said.
Much of the recent cartel-related violence in Sinaloa has occurred in and around state capital Culiacán. But García is expected to visits various municipalities in Sinaloa as he pursues a strategy aimed at reducing violence across the state, including in the Pacific coast resort city of Mazatlán.
Federal focus on Sinaloa could help appease Trump
García Harfuch’s presence in Sinaloa and the focus on the fight against fentanyl in the northern state could help the Mexican government to get on the right side of Donald Trump, who will be sworn in as the United States 47th president on Jan. 20.
He said he would impose the tariffs on the first day of his second term and that they would remain in effect “until such time as Drugs, in particular Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country!”
The record seizure of fentanyl in Sinaloa came just eight days after Trump issued his threat.
Operativo realizado en la Col. Francisco I. Madero, de #Sinaloa, por parte se @SEMAR_mx, @SEDENAmx, @GN_MEXICO_ y @FGRMexico. Se logró el decomiso de 151 maquinitas tragamonedas, las cuales se encontraban en 17 establecimientos que operaban de manera irregular como mini casino. pic.twitter.com/8SfB0bz3ve
On Tuesday, authorities also seized more than 100 slot machines allegedly operated by Sinaloa Cartel factions.
Ioan Grillo, a Mexico-based crime journalist, wrote on his Substack site Crash Out Media that it was “hard to believe” that the timing of the raids on two properties were the record amount of fentanyl was seized on Tuesday “was a coincidence.”
“Mexican agents will often make big busts handily before bilateral meetings with Washington,” he added.
Sheinbaum hopes that Mexican officials will have the opportunity to meet with members of Trump’s team before Jan. 20 so that they can present their case against the tariff that the former and future U.S. president has threatened to impose on Mexican exports.
In addition to seizing more than 1 tonne of fentanyl in the coastal municipality of Ahome, the army on Tuesday also confiscated in Sinaloa more than 4,000 liters of “chemical substances” used to manufacture methamphetamine, according to a government statement.
Authorities have reported other drug busts in recent days as well as arrests and seizures of firearms and slot machines at “casas de juego” — illegal casinos — allegedly operated by a criminal organization.
On Thursday, García noted on X that another suspect had been arrested in connection with the 1-tonne fentanyl bust on Tuesday.
“The investigations in the state continue,” he added.
According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, the Sinaloa Cartel, which was founded by El Mayo, El Chapo and others, “is largely responsible for the massive influx of fentanyl into the United States over the past approximately eight years.”
The National Autonomous University of Mexico was No. 54 on the Times Higher Education list of universities for interdisciplinary science, making it the highest-ranking university in that category in Latin America. (Daniel Uribarren/Unsplash)
The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) is ranked No. 54 on a recent list published by Times Higher Education, of the world’s best universities for interdisciplinary science research — making UNAM the No. 1 university in Latin America for that category.
Times Higher Education — formerly a supplement of The Times of London before becoming an independent entity in 2008 — is a prominent British publication and data provider best known for its annual world university rankings.
UNAM was judged on 11 Times Higher Education indicators, including its research funding environment, administrative support and quality of research output. (Facultad de Ciencias UNAM)
UNAM’s lofty position among the 749 universities on the list — representing 92 countries and territories — on THE’s inaugural list for interdisciplinary science research puts it ahead of every other university in Latin America.
Interdisciplinary science refers research that integrates concepts, methods and perspectives from multiple scientific fields in order to address complex questions or problems that can’t effectively be studied within a single field. An example would be biophysics, which combines principles of biology and physics to study the mechanics of biological systems
Among Latin American universities, No. 54 UNAM was followed by Brazil’s the University of Sao Paulo (No. 57), Pontifical Catholic University (No. 63) in Chile and Brazil’s Paulista State University (No. 84) in the top 100.
Mexico’s prestigious Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education (Monterrey Tech) appeared on the list at No. 139.
UNAM — which former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador once chastised for becoming “individualistic” during the nation’s neoliberal period from 1982 to 2018 — is the largest educational institution in Mexico and one of the largest and most prestigious in Latin America.
The University of Sao Paulo was the second highest ranked university on the Times Higher Education list after UNAM in the interdisciplinary science category. (Wikimedia Commons)
Its main campus in Mexico City is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and it also has satellite campuses and research centers across Mexico and abroad. THE lists UNAM’s overall enrollment at 175,968 students.
The interdisciplinary sciences list was arrived at by using 11 indicators to evaluate the three main stages of research: funding, administrative support, and “output,” such as published studies, research quality and reputation.
The top five schools on the list are MIT, Stanford University, the National University of Singapore, Cal Tech and Duke University.
UNAM indicated in a bulletin that its inclusion on the list is thanks to its commitment to finding solutions to global challenges. According to the UNAM Statistical Agenda 2024, the university carried out 6,383 research projects in 2023 alone.
THE also published an overall ranked list, the World University Rankings 2025, which was led by the United States with seven universities in the top 10.
The top five on that list are the University of Oxford (for the ninth year in a row), MIT, Harvard, Princeton and the University of Cambridge. Stanford dropped from second to sixth from last year.
A caravan of migrants walks through Huixtla, Chiapas, near the border with Guatemala. (Damián Sánchez/Cuartoscuro)
The federal government said Wednesday that more than 5,000 migrants were detained across Mexico on Tuesday, an indication that authorities are clamping down on migratory flows to the northern border ahead of Donald Trump’s inauguration as U.S. president on Jan. 20.
The government said in a statement that the Army, Navy, National Guard and state police “rescued” 5,234 migrants during an operation “in support” of the National Immigration Institute.
“Rescued” is a government euphemism for detained that alludes to the fact that migrants face a range of dangers, including human trafficking, as they travel through Mexico toward the country’s northern border.
Many of those detained on Tuesday will likely be deported to their countries of origin.
The government didn’t specify where the more than 5,000 migrants were detained on Tuesday. It did say that 349,625 migrants were “rescued” between Oct. 1 — the day President Claudia Sheinbaum took office — and Dec. 3.
A group of migrants gets into an INM vehicle in Tapachula, Chiapas, on Dec. 2. (Damián Sánchez/Cuartoscuro)
The detention of a large number of migrants on a single day coincided with the largest fentanyl bust in Mexican history, with authorities seizing more than 1 tonne of the synthetic opioid in Sinaloa.
In any future meetings with Trump or members of his team, the Mexican government could argue that the mass arrest of migrants and the huge fentanyl bust are evidence of its strong action against the flows of people and narcotics to the United States.
He asserted in a social media post that the tariff would remain in effect “until such time as Drugs, in particular Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country!”
“Both Mexico and Canada have the absolute right and power to easily solve this long simmering problem,” Trump added.
“We hereby demand that they use this power, and until such time that they do, it is time for them to pay a very big price!” he said.
The Sheinbaum administration appears to be stepping up detentions of unauthorized migrants, amid pressure from U.S. President-elect Donald Trump. (Mario Jasso/Cuartoscuro)
Sheinbaum spoke to Trump on Nov. 27, and the latter claimed that the Mexican president agreed to “stop migration through Mexico, and into the United States, effectively closing our southern border.”
Sheinbaum denied reaching such an agreement, retorting that “Mexico’s position is not to close borders but to build bridges between governments and between peoples.”
The president has, however, said that migrant caravans don’t reach the northern border because they are “taken care of” in Mexico.
In a letter to Trump last week, Sheinbaum said that Mexico has developed a “comprehensive policy” to attend to migrants who “cross our territory” en route to the United States, and pointed out that migration to the U.S. has declined 75% over the past year, in large part due to President Joe Biden’s implementation of a new border policy in early June.
It remains to be seen whether Trump will act on his most recent tariff threat, but it is clear that Mexico will argue forcefully against the imposition of a duty on exports to its largest trading partner.
Judging by Tuesday’s actions, concrete examples of a crackdown on migrants and drugs could form an important if not central part of the Mexican government’s argument. For Trump, those examples just might be more important than anything else.
By Mexico News Daily chief staff writer Peter Davies (peter.davies@mexiconewsdaily.com)
Soldiers stand guard outside the crime scene in Polanco's Plaza Miyana mall. (Rogelio Morales/Cuartoscuro)
A concert promoter alleged to be involved with a notorious drug cartel was gunned down in a shooting at a restaurant in the tony Mexico City neighborhood of Polanco on Wednesday afternoon.
The incident caught the attention of the U.S. Embassy which issued a security alert within hours of the shooting, urging U.S. citizens to “exercise caution and avoid the area if possible.”
Jesús Pérez Alvear was dining with three companions at the El Bajío restaurant in the Plaza Miyana mall when two men entered and approached the table. The suspects got within a few feet of their target, appeared to ensure his identity, then opened fire, hitting Pérez at least 10 times.
Pérez’s companions scurried out of harm’s way as other patrons dived under tables. The two gunmen ran out of the restaurant and fled the mall on a motorcycle. Pérez was pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics shortly thereafter.
Later that night, the Mexico City police department announced that the Federal Attorney General’s Office (FGR) would also be investigating the case. The National Guard and the Army were dispatched to the mall to secure the scene for FGR investigators.
Alleged cartel links
While Mexican authorities remain tight-lipped with regard to their investigation, the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has alleged that Pérez has been laundering money for the Jalisco New Generation cartel (CJNG).
The U.S. Treasury issued sanctions against Pérez for allegedly laundering money for the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. (OFAC)
A 2018 OFAC report states that “Perez has close ties to the family of [Abigael] Gonzalez Valencia, and focuses primarily on promoting concerts staged during large Mexican fairs, such as those held in Aguascalientes and Metepec.”
González Valencia, alias “El Cuini” was arrested in Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, in 2015 on organized crime charges and was subsequently arraigned under the Kingpin Law after evidence that he was involved in international drug trafficking was presented.
González, the brother-in-law of CJNG leader Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, currently sits in a maximum security prison in México state awaiting extradition to the United States.
As a result of the Kingpin Law charges, the U.S. Treasury Department froze all of González’s assets in the United States as well as all assets attributed to alleged associates. Pérez is alleged to be one of the associates who was affected by the Department’s actions.
The Treasury investigation further alleges that Pérez used his connections with the CJNG — and threats of violence — to win contracts to stage concerts through his promotional company Gallistica Diamante, also known as Ticket Premier.
The OFAC sanctioned Pérez on April 6, 2018, accusing him of laundering cartel money by mixing it in with revenues from concert ticket sales, food concessions and parking fees.
The FGR has not mentioned a possible motive for Wednesday’s murder, but Infobae reported that in June 2023 Pérez allegedly admitted to U.S. authorities that he had conspired with the CJNG to break the law.
While legends like Pancho Villa are remembered today, the women who fought alongside him in battle deserve greater recognition for their role in shaping modern Mexico. (Wikimedia Commons)
The Mexican Revolution is full of stories and larger-than-life characters like Pancho Villa, Emiliano Zapata, José María Morelos, and Venustiano Carranza. Less known are the thousands of women who joined the revolution to fight on the front lines and provided critical support services. They would set up camp, do all the cooking and washing, but also cared for the wounded, handled the logistics of arms and ammunition transportation, fought alongside the men, and even served as spies behind enemy lines.
By joining the Mexican Revolution, women were able to challenge the stereotype of women as weak, submissive, and incapable of holding important roles in society. These were not weak women. They did the heavy lifting on the battlefield, carrying arms and ammunition long distances, foraging for food which they used to prepare meals for hundreds, dragging wounded soldiers to safety so they could tend to their wounds. Many performed these tasks while pregnant or carrying a small child on their back.
The Adelitas were named after Adele Velarde Pérez, the granddaughter of a general who fought against the French. (Aresser23/Wikimedia Commons)
When the front line moved, it was the women who tore down the camp, carried the tents and bedding, pots and pans, food rations, and ammunition. The men carried their rifle astride a horse, the women walked beside them laden with all the supplies they would need for the next battle.
These women demonstrated strength, bravery, and resilience. From their experience in the revolution, they gained confidence, self-respect, and the respect of others. They became known as the “Adelitas”.
The Adelitas
The Adelitas were named after Adele Velarde Perez. According to the Mexican government, Velarde was the granddaughter of the prominent Juarez general Rafael Velarde who fought against French troops. She was a mere teenager when she joined and is said to be the first woman to join the fight. She became a revolutionary hero and a muse to the troops, embodying the essence of the national spirit and the brave revolutionary Mexican identity.
Velarde first joined the Mexican Association of the White Cross providing nursing services. She then became a member of the Northern Division of the Constitutionalist Army commanded by General Pancho Villa, and later joined the Northeastern Army Corps.
Many women actively fought on the frontlines of the Revolution. (Wikimedia Commons)
Most Mexican stories contain a tragic romance, and this one is no exception. Velarde fell in love with a soldier wounded at the front lines. As he lay in her arms dying while she tended his wound, he asked her to pull a piece of paper from his satchel. On the paper were the lyrics to a song he had written for her. The words became the corrido “La Adelita” which was sung obsessively by the revolutionaries and is still popular today.
The Adelitas played a critical, fundamental role in the revolution and the war might have turned out differently if not for their participation. In addition to the support services they provided, many fought side-by-side with the men, acted as spies behind enemy lines and took on other dangerous roles. Some women reached powerful positions and fought on the battlefield.
These women faced not only physical risks, but discrimination, exploitation, and violence, but were not intimidated. They were strongly committed to the revolution and the social justice and equality it represented.
Adelitas known as fierce and fearless warriors
Adelitas were strongly committed to the revolution and the social justice and equality it represented. (Cuartoscuro)
Only a handful of the Adelitas were recognized as true heroes of the revolution, but for many Mexicans, their names are now synonymous with bravery and duty:
Col. Maria Quinteros de Meras
Pancho Villa highly respected Quinteros de Meras who became a high-ranking officer reaching the rank of Coronela. In her three years in his rebel army, she fought heroically in ten battles. She could shoot as well as the men and dressed as they did wearing khaki suits and cartridge belts. The El Paso Morning Times wroton May 7, 1914, that “some of her followers have come to believe she is endowed with some supernatural power.” She and her husband both fought voluntarily in the same outfit. When they left, Pancho Villa offered to pay them for their services – as he did all his troops – but both refused.
Margarita Neri
Margarita Neri. (Hormigueros de Potosí)
Neri was singled out during the revolution as a fearless fighter. When the war broke out, she was a landowner in Quintano Roo but was left behind by male forces because she was a woman. Undaunted, Neri raised her own troops — first numbering only 200 but growing to 1000 in just two months — who realized she could ride and shoot as well as they could. She led looting raids throughout Chiapas and Tabasco. It is said that her approach instilled fear in the federal troops, who fled before her. Allegedly, her arrival frightened the Governor of Guerrero so thoroughly that he hid in a crate to flee her onslaught. She was eventually executed but where and when remain unknown.
Elisa Griensen Zambrano
At the age of 12, Griensen was already a devout fan of Pancho Villa and was passionately opposed to the U.S. troops. She lived in the town of Parral, Chihuahua. When Pershing’s troops — under the command of Major Frank Tompkins — approached Parral in 1916, the men of the town refused to fight. Griensen gathered up the women and children and confronted the troops themselves. Armed with sticks and guns they forced the troops to retreat, ordering the major to proclaim, “Viva Mexico, Viva Villa” on his way out of town.
Encarnacion Mares “Chonita” de Cardenas
Chonita de Mares. (Hormigueros de Potosí)
Cardenas was also described as fearless and was known for wearing her hair cut short and donning ragged men’s clothing. After her heroic fighting at the Battle of Lampazo, Nuevo Leon, she was promoted from corporal to lieutenant. She left the war in 1916 after the fighting died down in the north.
The Feminist Movement for women’s rights emerged from the Mexican Revolution
Among the women heroes of the Mexican Revolution two female journalists stand out for their outspoken opposition and criticism of Porfirio Diaz: Juana Belén Gutiérrez de Mendoza, and Hermila Galindo.
Born in Durango, Gutierrez de Mendoza wrote radical feminist literature against Catholicism, political corruption, and social injustices under Díaz, who had her imprisoned numerous times to prevent her from writing. Each time after being released she continued to broadcast her beliefs that the political parties and leaders were illegitimate. She strongly believed in democracy for Mexico and faulted the Mexican people for not insisting on their rights. She ultimately became disillusioned when Carranza assassinated Zapata — who she considered the only real leader — in 1919.
Hermila Galindo continued to grow more famous and well-known after the war ended. During the war she was the editor of the radical journal Mujer Moderna. She would encourage women’s groups to fight for their rights. She advocated for not only general education for girls but also sex education. As an early suffragette, she also proclaimed that women should have the same rights granted to men, including the right to vote. After the war she fought to include women in the 1917 constitution, was the first woman to run for elected office and was seen as the leader of the feminist movement and continued to fight for women’s rights.
The Adelitas have never received appropriate recognition for their contribution to the Mexican Revolution. Women who were heroes were largely overlooked in history. In 1941, Adele Velarde was recognized as a “Veteran of the Revolution” by the Mexican Ministry of National Defense. In 1962, she was named a member of the Mexican Legion of Honor.
After former president Felipe Calderon made news criticizing Mexico's attempts to extract a governmental apology from Spain for the conquest, President Sheinbaum said she plans to keep asking. (Daniel Augusto/Cuartoscuro)
The big news out of President Claudia Sheinbaum’s Wednesday morning press conference was that Mexico’s minimum wage will increase by 12% on Jan. 1.
Labor Minister Marath Bolaños López announced that the daily minimum wage will increase to 278.80 pesos (US $13.75) per day in most of the country and 419.88 pesos (US $20.70) in the northern border zone frequently referred to as the Mexico Free Zone. (Click here to read MND’s report).
President Sheinbaum talks with officials she invited to accompany her at Wednesday’s daily press conference as she announced an increase to Mexico’s minimum wage. (Daniel Augusto/Cuartoscuro)
Later in the press conference, Sheinbaum responded to a question about the plan to impose a US $42 per-person immigration fee on cruise ship passengers when they arrive at Mexican ports.
She also acknowledged a record fentanyl bust in Sinaloa on Tuesday (read MND’s report here), and declared that Mexico will continue to “insist” on an apology from Spain for the abuses committed during the Spanish conquest of the Mexica Empire (Triple Alliance).
Sheinbaum advises consultation on fee for cruise ship passengers
Both houses of Congress have now voted to impose a US $42 immigration fee on every passenger of each cruise ship that docks at a Mexican port starting in 2025, whether or not said passengers disembark in Mexico. The Senate approved the move on Tuesday after the Chamber of Deputies did the same late last month.
A reporter asked Sheinbaum whether she would consider exempting cruise ship passengers from the payment of the nonresident fee in 2025, as cruise lines have requested.
“It’s an increase. It’s not like all of a sudden they’re going to charge US $42,” she said.
The cruise ship Crystal Serenity arriving in Acapulco in June. (Carlos Alberto Carbajal/Cuartoscuro)
Sheinbaum was referring to the Congress-approved increase in the nonresident fee from 717 pesos (US $35) to 860 pesos (US $42). International tourists entering Mexico by air, for example, already have to pay the fee, but cruise ship passengers are currently exempt.
Sheinbaum didn’t commit to exempting cruise ship passengers from the payment of the fee next year but noted that she had instructed government officials, including Navy Minister Raymundo Pedro Morales Ángeles, to speak with cruise lines about the matter.
Former president Calderón should ‘apologize for the atrocities of the war on drugs’
A reporter noted that former Mexican president Felipe Calderón recently spoke at an event in Madrid and made critical remarks about ex-president Andrés Manuel López Obador’s decision to ask the Spanish government to apologize for abuses committed during the Spanish conquest of the Mexica (Aztec) empire.
“Do you think that Calderón will someday apologize for the war on drugs … or [for] García Luna? retorted Sheinbaum.
Calderón launched a militarized “war” against drug cartels shortly after he took office as president in late 2006. The strategy is now widely attributed to have led to a huge increase in homicides in Mexico.
“I don’t agree with Calderón,” Sheinbaum said in reference to his criticism of the request for an apology from Spain.
“… And he should think about apologizing for the atrocities of the war on drugs,” she added.
Former president of Mexico Felipe Calderón (2006-2012) recently criticized Mexico’s last president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, at a Madrid event for having asked Spain to formally apologize to Mexico for the Spanish conquest. (Wikimedia Commons)
Mexico will ‘insist’ on an apology from Spain
Sheinbaum noted that 2025 will mark the 700th anniversary of the foundation of Tenochtitlán, the capital of the Mexica empire and the forerunner to Mexico City.
She said that the government will commemorate the anniversary and continue to “insist” on an apology for abuses committed by Spain during the conquest and the fall of Tenochtitlán, even though the Spanish government rejected López Obrador’s request in 2019.
Saying sorry “enhances peoples and government and strengthens relationships,” Sheinbaum said.
Acknowledging that “terrible abuses” were committed against Indigenous people “allows you to see the future,” she said.
“If one doesn’t recognize the atrocities of the past committed by others, how does one forgive? How does one build a new history?” Sheinbaum asked.
By Mexico News Daily chief staff writer Peter Davies (peter.davies@mexiconewsdaily.com)
A pro-vaping user protesting outside the Chamber of Deputies building in Mexico City in March. (Daniel Augusto/Cuartoscuro)
Mexico’s lower house of Congress on Tuesday easily approved a constitutional reform to ban e-cigarettes and vaping devices, as well as sanction synthetic drugs such as fentanyl.
The proposal must now pass in the federal Senate to become law.
The reform bill, which would make a ban on the sale of vaping devices and e-cigarettes part of the Mexican constitution, easily passed Tuesday in the Chamber of Deputies, with a vote of 410 votes in favor and 24 against. (Morena party/Twitter)
“The ban on fentanyl and the use of vapes is a significant step that will prevent thousands of cases of respiratory illnesses and lung diseases that have accounted for a significant number of deaths, mainly among young people,” member of Congress Margarita García García said, according to the online news site Infobae.
A reported 1.7 million Mexicans used e-cigarettes and vapes in 2023, while 16.4% of adults in Mexico smoke some form of tobacco.
Arguing that the smoking devices were damaging public health, former Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador instituted a ban on the sale of vaping equipment and e-cigarettes by presidential decree in 2022 – although both continued to be widely available in Mexico. However, he didn’t manage to get a law passed before he left office at the end of September of this year.
President Claudia Sheinbaum confirmed when she took office in October that she would pursue a legislative ban.
The new reform, which passed with 410 votes in favor and 24 against, also sanctions the “production, distribution and sale of toxic substances, chemical precursors [and] the illicit use of fentanyl and other nonauthorized synthetic drugs.”
Although fentanyl is available for medical use, it is otherwise banned in Mexico.
Former Deputy Health Minister Hugo López-Gatell at a presidential press conference in 2023 explaining to reporters that vaping and e-cigarettes posed the same risks to health as conventional tobacco products. (Galo Caño Rodríguez/Cuartoscuro)
While there was broad support for the reform in Congress, Reuters reported that opposition legislator Éctor Jaime Ramírez said including vaping devices and e-cigarettes in legislation banning synthetic drugs like fentanyl trivialized “the effort being made to combat the most addictive and dangerous drugs.”
Meanwhile, some worry that introducing an outright ban on vapes could encourage the sale of such products on the black market.
“These vapes are brought by organized crime from China, India and even Bangladesh,” journalist Óscar Balderas said, according to the Guardian newspaper. Illegal imports are entirely unregulated, and “the consumer has no idea what they’re putting in their body,” he added.
The legislation now heads to Mexico’s Senate, where the ruling Morena party holds a healthy majority, making it likely — given its easy passage in the Chamber of Deputies — that the ban will become law.
Species in the Yucatán Peninsula like jaguars, Central American tapirs and white-tailed deer have habitat around the the Maya Train. (Shutterstock)
The Sélvame del Tren activist collective has criticized a contract between Tren Maya S.A. de C.V. and a private company that has been tasked with deterring wildlife from the railway tracks.
Under the contract, the company Susoma Soluciones Ambientales S. de R.L. de C.V., is responsible for scaring away, capturing, removing and even euthanizing “harmful” species that pose a threat to the operation of the Maya Train. These species include jaguars (Panthera onca), Central American tapirs (Tapirus bairdii) and white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus).
The contract outlines that the staff of Susoma Soluciones Ambientales, S. de R.L. de C.V., based in Toluca, Mexico state, has the right to conduct “wildlife control” through a variety of mitigation activities. These include scaring away wildlife with fireworks, installing nets and traps and using tranquilizer darts for larger animals, among other methods.
“Measures like these not only represent a direct attack on local fauna,” Sélvame del Tren stressed in a statement, “but also a violation of Mexican environmental laws and international commitments regarding conservation.”
The agreement also calls for the company to develop a habitat management program that reduces the presence of wildlife attractors, through practices that include pruning flora, relocating tree species, creating natural barriers and building alternative watering holes away from the train tracks to keep animals away.
According to local media, the Maya Train paid 9 million pesos (US $444,000) to Susoma Soluciones Ambientales for the wildlife control services under this agreement, effective from Sept. 3, 2024, to Dec. 31, 2024.
The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) lists the jungles in the southeastern Mexican states of Quintana Roo, Yucatán and Campeche — along with jungles in Belize and Guatemala — as among the largest in terms of priority landscapes for jaguar conservation.
María José Villanueva, director of Conservation for WWF in Mexico, said the jaguar faces significant challenges in the region due to fragmentation of the jungle caused by the Maya Train’s construction, the subdivision of land for new real estate developments and polluting projects such as pig farms.
The contract with the federal government calls for Susoma Soluciones Ambientales to develop a habitat management program to reduce wildlife that they say has questionable practices. (Elizabeth Ruiz/Cuartoscuro)
In contrast, preliminary results of the latest jaguar census in Mexico in September found that in most of the study’s areas, the species’ population has remained stable or even increased since the previous jaguar census, which was completed in 2018.
The census’ final results will be announced in February 2025.
This week, the Senate approved modifications to the Federal Rights Law, increasing the fee for international visitors. (Especial/Cuartoscuro)
Traveling to Mexico will be more expensive for international tourists starting in 2025.
On Tuesday, the Senate approved modifications to the Federal Rights Law, increasing the fee for international visitors. Furthermore, the government announced new taxes for international tourists in the Riviera Maya region.
📌 Con el propósito de actualizar las cuotas por la prestación de servicios públicos e incorporar beneficios para los pueblos y comunidades indígenas, afromexicanas, personas con discapacidad y adultos mayores, el Senado aprobó reformas a la Ley Federal de Derechos. pic.twitter.com/95OFTHHYRU
The Employers’ Confederation of Mexico Quintana Roo (Coparmex), warned that the new fees would turn the state’s ports 213% more expensive than an average Caribbean port.
The Riviera Maya is a marketing designation of several resort locations in the state of Quintana Roo.
Here’s everything you need to know.
International visitors soon to pay more to enter Mexico
Starting next year, the existing fee for international travelers entering Mexico will increase from 717 pesos (US $35) to 860 pesos (US $42). The new tax will apply to all international tourists vacationing in Mexico, including cruise ship passengers.
Previously, cruise ship visitors were exempt from the fee because their average stay in the country tends to be six hours. However, last month, Congress voted to impose a US $42 immigration fee on every passenger of each cruise ship that docks at any of the country’s ports.
Officially known as the “Non-Resident Fee,” the tax will apply to all cruise passengers stopping in Mexico starting in 2025, regardless of whether individuals disembark.
Airport immigration services fee goes up slightly
The law also increased the fee for airport immigration services to passengers on international flights departing Mexico, which will increase from 185 pesos (US $9) to just over 223 pesos (US $10).
The law also increased the fee for airport immigration services to passengers on international flights departing Mexico. (Senado de México via X)
New US $5 tax in the Riviera Maya
In 2025, cruise ship passengers visiting ports in the southeastern state of Quintana Roo will have to pay an additional US $5 fee that is earmarked the National Disaster Prevention Fund. This fee is intended to help rebuild tourism infrastructure potentially affected by hurricanes and other natural disasters in the area.
Why has Mexico increased tourist fees?
The move to increase travel fees for international tourists aims to raise funds for investment in Mexico’s public works and social assistance programs.
Of the total revenue generated from the international travelers’ fee, 67% will be allocated to the Ministry of National Defense (Defensa). The funding will be used for:
operational expenses
administrative services
construction
acquisitions and leasing
supplementary projects
equipment procurement
installation and investment in infrastructure related to Defensa’s management of state-owned companies.
The remainder of the fee will be allocated to the Federal Treasury. The law doesn’t mention a specific destination for that portion of the funds.
Meanwhile, 83% of the funds collected from the US $10 immigration services fee will be allocated to the National Migration Institute (INM) to modernize its equipment and infrastructure along Mexico’s southern border. The remainder will be allocated to the Federal Treasury.