MADRID, 5 Nov. (EUROPA PRESS) –
The president of the Mexican National Electoral Institute (INE) has denounced that “it is clear and evident that there is an attack against the electoral authorities” after the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) has pointed to the body as a “partial instrument and of sabotage of the citizen’s will” in the face of electoral reform.
Lorenzo de Córdova has assured this Friday in two radio interventions collected by ‘Milenio’ that they will file an action of unconstitutionality against the CNDH before the Mexican Supreme Court of Justice for the report in which he makes these statements.
The person in charge has pointed out that the CNDH has violated the Constitution, since it does not allow it to rule on electoral aspects, and has branded this interference as “unacceptable”.
“Many things have happened along the way, such as the political and factional use of the Mexican State as the CNDH that violated the Constitution. We are going to present a constitutional controversy, because it is very serious that the body that should be the guarantor of the Constitution to avoid the violation of rights, be the first to violate them,” he said this Friday.
Córdova has accused the head of the CNDH, Rosario Piedra, of issuing a position that “clearly aligns with a political position” in the midst of the discussion of the political-electoral reform that seeks to go back in democratic advances, “according to what he has collected. the same medium.
This Friday, the body that must monitor compliance with Human Rights has once again ruled in the same direction and has assured that it has not breached the constitutional text. In addition, he has justified that this issue enters into his business since “democracy is Human Rights.”
Last week the INE defended the need to discuss the electoral reform proposed by the Mexican president, with which it seeks to end the excessive dominance of the majority and avoid the exclusion of some minor formations. The organization called on the Citizen Movement to sit down to negotiate to reach the “maximum consensus” after the opposition alliance Va por México agreed to do so.