México City – A series of interconnected events are unfolding in Mexico, driven by shifting political alliances, corporate missteps, and escalating environmental concerns, with implications extending directly to the administration of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) and, increasingly, to the political calculations of former U.S. President Donald Trump.
1. Sheinbaum Sends 26 Narcos to the U.S.
Mexico delivered 26 high-profile cartel figures to U.S. custody in a massive Army-led operation involving 1,000 troops, 90 vehicles, and 12 aircraft. Washington promised no death penalty, but life sentences are likely. This wasn’t an extradition—it was a “transfer,” a legal phantom used to bypass a slow, often corrupt judicial system that stalls extraditions. In practice, it was an illegal banishment… and an effective one to keep Trump happy.
2. U.S. Charges Mexicans in Pemex Bribery Plot
U.S. prosecutors allege two Mexican businessmen based in Texas paid $150,000 in bribes to officials at Pemex, Mexico’s state oil giant, between 2019 and 2021. The goal: win contracts for construction, services, and offshore platforms—and kill an inconvenient audit. One suspect is a politician from PAN, Mexico’s main opposition party. Which begs the question: after Sheinbaum’s high-profile security cooperation, is Trump also handing her a political gift by taking down a rival?
3. Adidas Sorry for ‘Oaxaca Slip-On’
Adidas apologized after a sandal in its new line copied a traditional Zapotec *huarache* from Oaxaca without involving the Indigenous community. Mexico’s president condemned the move and is weighing legal action. One in five Indigenous women in Mexico lives in poverty. Forget the apology—Adidas should be cutting royalty checks.
4. Mexico’s Ruling Party Turns on Itself
Morena, the party that swept Obrador and Sheinbaum to power, is now consumed by infighting between idealists and power-hungry insiders. What began as a political movement is starting to look like a family feud over the spoils of victory. Sheinbaum’s electoral reform aims to sideline the insiders and strengthen her coalition. Mexico’s rules make it unusually hard for a single party to win a majority, forcing Morena to ally with career politicians she doesn’t trust—something her reform is designed to end.
5. Mexico City Breaks 73-Year Rain Record
Sunday’s storm dumped 3.3 inches of rain on the capital’s historic center—smashing the previous record of 2.6 inches set in 1952. Streets flooded with up to 16 inches of water, shutting metro Line 2 and grounding flights at the main airport. That’s three “wettest day” records in just two months. Once a lake, Mexico City could be one again—unless it invests in a drainage system built for the century it’s living in.
Fuente: https://www.mexicodecoded.com/p/trumps-favors-adidass-faux-pas-and