In a world first, Mexico revamps its justice system

In the first test of its kind in the world, Mexico has launched a bold experiment to reshape its judiciary. Instead of judges being appointed, as they once were, Mexican citizens ticked off their favorites at the ballot box this month.

With the first batch of this initial two-part process complete, President Claudia Sheinbaum has declared Mexico “the most democratic country in the world.”

But global observers are more circumspect about the election by popular vote of more than 2,600 judicial positions, from Supreme Court justices to local magistrates, and its effect on democracy.

Why We Wrote This

Everyone agrees the justice system in Mexico needs to be revamped. But where the ruling power sees its new reform as a leap forward, others believe Mexico has just moved several steps backward.

Free and fair elections are an essential building block of democracy. But the voting process has been criticized for being rushed. The reform became law in September, and Mexico’s electoral institute operated a barebones budget – about half of what they requested from Congress – to carry out the vote on June 1. Critics also complain about inconsistencies in how candidates were vetted; a low bar to run for a position, potentially undermining professionalism in the judiciary; and a strikingly small voter turnout.

The process favored candidates associated with President Sheinbaum’s left-leaning party, Morena. The party controlled two of three candidate-vetting committees and party affiliates distributed “cheat sheets” in the lead-up to the vote, indicating their preferred candidates. All nine seats on Mexico’s Supreme Court were filled by candidates with Morena ties. This essentially puts control of the executive, legislature, and judiciary into a single party’s hands, erasing the democratic value of checks and balances by independent powers.

The Organization of American States warned it “does not recommend that this model of selecting judges be replicated [in] other countries” in a preliminary report published June 6.

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