The political confrontation in Mexico added a new episode this Tuesday in Congress, where the national leader of the PRI, Alejandro Moreno, announced that he will present formal complaints to the Attorney General's Office (FGR) against figures linked to Morena.
The announcement occurred during the beginning of an extraordinary period in the Chamber of Deputies, in a climate already marked by crossovers between the ruling party and the opposition.
Complaints in preparation and cross accusations
Moreno assured that the legal presentations will reach different actors in the ruling party, including accusations towards environments close to former president Andrés Manuel López Obrador.
The PRI leader maintained that he will take the cases to both national and international bodies, in what he defined as a strategy to make visible alleged links between politics and organized crime.
In his speech, he spoke of an alleged “narcopolitics” installed in power structures, an accusation that generated immediate reactions within the legislative precinct.
A speech that raised the tone in Congress
From the podium, Moreno hardened his position and launched direct criticism of the ruling party, amidst murmurs and mixed responses between legislators.
The PRI leader affirmed that Mexico faces a security crisis and warned about the risk of infiltration of organized crime into State institutions.
The statements occurred in a context of high parliamentary tension, with a divided Congress and increasingly confrontational debates.
Governors and Morena figures at the center of the debate
The accusations were not limited to the legislative sphere. Moreno also targeted Morena governors such as Rubén Rocha Moya and Américo Villarreal Anaya, whom he linked to alleged political protection networks and criminal structures.
These statements add to a series of previous allegations in the public debate, although so far they have not been accompanied by firm judicial resolutions.
In the aforementioned states, the political discussion intensified in parallel, with crossed positions between the ruling party and the opposition.
Attempt to take the conflict outside of Mexico
The PRI leader also announced that he will seek to internationalize the complaints, taking files to organizations such as the Organization of American States (OAS), with the aim of adding external pressure.
The strategy aims to expand the scope of the political conflict beyond the Mexican Congress, in a scenario already marked by polarization.
An escalating political climate
The dispute between PRI and Morena is part of a scenario of growing political confrontation, where discursive intersections have escalated in recent months.
Looking ahead to the next electoral cycles, analysts warn that these types of episodes could intensify and mark the public agenda in Mexico.
For now, Moreno's announcement opens a new political and judicial front that promises to last over time, while Congress remains the main stage of the conflict.
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