The muscle of the extreme right against AMLO
Diego Martín Velázquez Caballero
The campaign for the presidency of Mexico will not be a sunny day and the middle class constitutes a participatory agent of the streets that can make a pilgrimage to the right
A question echoed in the narrative of various political analysts after the visits of Xóchitl Gálvez and Claudia Sheinbaum with Mario Bergoglio, as well as the March in Defense of Democracy: How many divisions does the Pope have? How strong does the Holy See have?
The electoral campaign in Mexico has begun and the competing groups are beginning to manifest their power.
After the failure of Eduardo Verástegui and the search for the independent candidacy, the Mexican extreme right seems to clear up the accusation of infiltration and make evident the capacity to convene in the configuration of the political class that will occupy the presidency of the republic in the next six-year term.
Although the allegations about a progressive ecofeminist regime remain anecdotal, the truth is that a tandem of businessmen, intellectuals, civil servants, opinion leaders, religious people and various urban middle classes; They are dissatisfied with the “strange” project proposed by the Fourth Transformation in the person of Claudia Sheinbaum.
The call in multiple cities in the country and some important points abroad was no less.
Civil Society, Dresser's middle-class Frodo, is fighting for the institutionality of a dimension of private law, the rationalist autonomy of a part of the public sector, the market and the incursion into the Western world.
The vision of the protesters in the marches called by the extreme right implies the adoption of a civic electoral modernizing path.
When talking about conservative and right-wing groups, this fact constitutes a quantum leap.
Catholic nationalism is shocked by democracy; However, he seems to understand the inevitability of open societies for the survival of all.
The impact of the various pink demonstrations by the INE and Democracy must be acknowledged in Morena.
The campaign for the presidency of Mexico will not be a sunny day and the middle class constitutes a participatory agent of the streets that can make a pilgrimage to the right because the conservative revolutionary nationalism and the pragmatism of Morena, increasingly detaches itself from a Mexican path towards North American modernity.
The middle classes go with the right not only because of aspirationism but because of the Morenoist incomprehension of legitimacy in modern urban times.
Denying the importance of the pink demonstrations and discrediting the clean message of honest actors can reduce the electoral quota that the Fourth Transformation hopes to obtain.
Faced with a scenario of divided government, the understanding of governability must involve the entire country. Mexico is everyone's game.