Will it be? / Goodbye to the togas?

Goodbye to togas?
Everything indicates that Hugo Aguilar Ortiz, former advisor to the EZLN and defender of indigenous rights, will preside over the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation. In response to this news, he declared that he will propose to his colleagues that the use of togas be eliminated, as he will dress simply "so as not to forget that he must act in favor of the people." Now we'll have to see how much the proposal resonates with the country's highest court, where luxuries are not exactly frowned upon. Will it be?
No culprits
With over 80% abstention, the election of judges will have the lowest turnout in history, with elections for important national positions, and where all citizens registered on the Nominal List are eligible to vote. The INE (National Electoral Institute) stated that they met the conditions for more than 100 million voters to vote. So , whose fault will it be? Like so many things, it will target many people, and no one will be held accountable. Will it be?
Deconstitutionalization…
Although it sounds like a tongue-twister, some specialists have begun to use it to refer to what has happened with judicial reform and election: judges , magistrates, and ministers have been stripped of their independence and ability to make decisions legitimized by the Constitution, which inconvenience the rulers … Furthermore, they have been removed from career professional service, competitive examinations, and specialization, so that they seek popularity rather than impartiality. Is that so?
They look so much alike…
Those who continue to escalate the dispute between them are Senate President Gerardo Fernández Noroña and PRI President Alejandro Moreno. Both figures, in their press conferences and on social media , never miss an opportunity to discredit each other. Yesterday, the PRI member called on the Morena member to stand by his statements and proposed the resignations of Luisa Alcalde and Andrés Manuel López Beltrán due to the poor results in Durango and Veracruz. He even said, "If you need anything, we'll lend it to you," which they say refers to the value. Is that true?
Don't trust youtubers
Just when everything seemed irretrievably lost, yesterday, a candidate for Supreme Court justice had to reluctantly acknowledge that he had lost the election. But weeks earlier, his project had been hyped to the skies by certain YouTubers who even released exclusive videos. It's even rumored that these individuals salted his candidacy. Or does no one remember that they followed a "bottle cap" all over the country, about whom they even wrote a book ? Could it be?
Dante's Dream
We're told that Jorge Álvarez Máynez, national leader of Movimiento Ciudadano (Citizen Movement), stated in Veracruz that they are positioned as the second-largest political force in the state. Máynez asserted that they captured nearly 600,000 votes and won in 41 municipalities, surpassing the PRI by 300,000 votes and the PAN by more than 300,000 ... It seems that Dante Delgado's dream of political growth in his home state is coming true. It's a shame that those who didn't win were the assassinated candidates and the political violence in the state. Could that be true?
Close to the Army
They say that some groups within the Army had their own cards on their shoulders to reach the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation, but they lost. The profiles of these military sectors were magistrates Zulema Mosri, Ricardo Sodi, and even lawyer César Gutiérrez Priego; the former is the wife of general and former Fox official Rafael Macedo de la Concha, while the latter became linked to the Sedena through an educational agreement the agency had with Anáhuac University … And the third is the son of former general Jesús Gutierrez Rebollo. Could it be?

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