Technical coordination
Introduction
The Pact for Mexico was a national political agreement signed on December 2, 2012 at the Chapultepec Castle in Mexico City by the then President of the Republic, Enrique Peña Nieto; Gustavo Madero Muñoz, President of the National Action Party; Cristina Díaz Salazar, Interim President of the Institutional Revolutionary Party; and Jesús Zambrano Grijalva, President of the Party of the Democratic Revolution.[1] The Green Ecologist Party of Mexico, through its spokesperson Arturo Escobar y Vega, joined as a signatory of the agreement on January 28, 2013.[2].
The main agreement of the Pact is to deepen the democratic process based on three guiding axes:
The document is divided into 5 sections: Vision, Agreements, 2013 Budget Agreements, Work Method and Commitments for Reforms.[3].
Signature
The signing of the Pact for Mexico took place on December 2, 2012, one day after the start of the Federal Government headed by Enrique Peña Nieto. The protocol ceremony held in the Alcázar of the Chapultepec Castle, in addition to the signatories, was attended by: Jesús Murillo Karam, President of the Chamber of Deputies; Ernesto Cordero Arroyo, President of the Senate of the Republic; the parliamentary coordinators of the different parties in the Chambers of the Congress of the Union; Secretaries of State, Governors, elected Governors and the elected head of Government of the Federal District, as well as the leaders of the Green Ecologist Party of Mexico.[4].
Agreements
Contenido
El Pacto contiene cinco grandes acuerdos, que a su vez, contienen acuerdos particulares de cada tema que se traducen en 95 compromisos.
Society of rights and freedoms
Through this Pact, the signatories agree that the government will carry out a set
of administrative actions and that the agreeing political forces will promote reforms
legislative measures, as well as political actions that expand freedom and the range of