LXIV Legislature of the Mexican Congress

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
LXIV Legislature of the Mexican Congress
LXIII LXV
Mexico Chamber of Deputies backdrop.jpg
Overview
Legislative bodyCongress of the Union
Meeting placeLegislative Palace of San Lázaro
(Deputies/General Congress)
Edificio del Senado
(Senate)
Term1 September 2018 (2018-09-01) – 31 August 2021 (2021-08-31)
Election1 July 2018
Senate of the Republic
Senado de México (2018-2024).svg
Members128
PresidentMónica Fernández Balboa
Chamber of Deputies
Diputados de México (2018-2021).svg
Members500
PresidentDulce María Sauri Riancho
Sessions
1st1 September 2018 – present

The LXIV Legislature of the Mexican Congress was the meeting of the Mexican Congress of the Union that convened on 1 September 2018 and ended on 31 August 2021. It is composed of the 500 federal deputies and 128 senators elected in the 2018 Mexican general election. While the deputies will serve only in the LXIV Legislature, the senators, elected to six-year terms, will also form the Senate in the LXV Legislature, which will convene in 2021.

Highlights[]

The LXIV Legislature is noteworthy for its gender parity, with the most women ever elected to the Chamber of Deputies and Senate. Women will hold 49 percent of the seats in the Senate, a national record and the third-highest percentage of women in a current national upper house, according to data collected by the Interparliamentary Union.[1] The Chamber of Deputies will have the fourth-highest percentage of women among lower houses.[2] In the Chamber of Deputies, this was the first election to be conducted after a 2017 redistricting of the federal electoral districts conducted by the National Electoral Institute. In reapportionment, Mexico City lost three seats, while seven states added a seat and four states lost one seat each.[3] On August 23, the PRI, PRD, PAN and Movimiento Ciudadano announced they would challenge the allocation of proportional representation seats in the Chamber of Deputies, saying MORENA is overrepresented.[4]

Composition[]

Senate[]

Party Senators
Relative majority
Senators
First minority
Senators
PR
Total
PAN (Mexico).svg
National Action Party 7 10 6 23
PRI Party (Mexico).svg
Institutional Revolutionary Party 1 6 6 13
PRD logo (Mexico).svg
Party of the Democratic Revolution 1 5 2 8
PT Party (Mexico).svg
Labor Party 5 0 1 6
PVE logo (Mexico).svg
Ecologist Green Party of Mexico 1 4 2 7
MC Party (Mexico).svg
Movimiento Ciudadano 4 1 2 7
PNA Party (Mexico).svg
New Alliance Party 0 1 0 1
Morena logo (Mexico).svg
National Regeneration Movement 38 4 13 55
PES logo (Mexico).svg
Social Encounter Party 7 1 0 8
Total 64 32 32 128
Source: INE (PR)

Chamber of Deputies[]

Party Deputies
Relative majority
Deputies
PR
Total
PAN (Mexico).svg
National Action Party 41 41 82
PRI Party (Mexico).svg
Institutional Revolutionary Party 7 38 45
PRD logo (Mexico).svg
Party of the Democratic Revolution 9 12 21
Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg
Labor Party 57 3 60
PVE logo (Mexico).svg
Ecologist Green Party of Mexico 5 11 16
MC Party (Mexico).svg
Movimiento Ciudadano 17 10 27
PNA Party (Mexico).svg
New Alliance Party 2 0 2
Morena logo (Mexico).svg
National Regeneration Movement 107 85 192
PES logo (Mexico).svg
Social Encounter Party 55 0 55
Gray-Candidatura independiente.svg
Independent 0
Total 300 200 500
Source: INE (PR)

Leadership[]

Senate[]

President of the Senate
Marti Batres
(MRN), 2018–2019
Mónica Fernández
(MRN), 2019–2020
Eduardo Ramírez
(MRN), 2020–2021

Presiding[]

Party Leadership[]

Chamber of Deputies[]

President of the Chamber of Deputies
Porfirio Muñoz Ledo (MRN), 2018–2019
Laura Rojas Hernández (PAN), 2019–2020
Dulce María Sauri (PRI), 2020–2021

Presiding[]

Party Leadership[]

Membership[]

Senate[]

The Senate is composed of 128 seats; three each elected from each of Mexico's 32 federative entities for a total of 96, as well as 32 proportional representation seats.

Senators by proportional representation[]

Chamber of Deputies[]

The Chamber of Deputies is composed of 500 seats, elected from 300 single-member federal electoral districts and 40 apiece from five proportional representation electoral regions.

Deputies by proportional representation[]

Chamber composition by proportional representation
Region Deputy Party Region Deputy Party
First PAN Third Morena
First Ernesto Ruffo Appel Third
First Martha Elena García Gómez Third
First Third
First Third
First Third
First Third
First Carlos Humberto Castaños Valenzuela Third
First PRI Third
First Third
First Alfredo Villegas Arreola Third
First Third
First Third
First Third
First Ismael Alfredo Hernández Deras Third Armando Contreras Castillo
First Margarita Flores Sánchez Third
First PRD Third
First PVEM Third
First Third
First Itzcoatl Tonatiuh Bravo Padilla MC Third
First Fourth PAN
First Fourth Adriana Dávila Fernández
First Fourth Marco Antonio Adame Castillo
First Fourth
First Morena Fourth
First Fourth Ana Lucía Riojas Martínez
First Tatiana Clouthier Carrillo Fourth
First Fourth María Lucero Saldaña PRI
First Fourth
First Fourth
First Fourth
First Fourth
First Fourth
First Fourth PRD
First Fourth
First Fourth
First Fourth
First Fourth Óscar González Yáñez PT
First Martha Patricia Ramírez Lucero Fourth Arturo Escobar y Vega PVEM
First Fourth
Second Raúl Gracia Guzmán PAN Fourth Martha Angélica Tagle Martínez MC
Second María Marcela Torres Peimbert Fourth Morena
Second Fourth
Second Fourth Lorena Cuéllar Cisneros
Second Marcos Aguilar Vega Fourth
Second Fourth
Second Fourth
Second Fourth
Second Fourth
Second Fourth Gabriela Cuevas Barrón
Second Fernando Torres Graciano Fourth
Second Fourth
Second Juan Carlos Muñoz Márquez Fourth Porfirio Alejandro Muñoz Ledo y Lazo de la Vega
Second Ivonne Liliana Álvarez García PRI Fourth
Second Pedro Pablo Treviño Villarreal Fourth
Second Fourth
Second Rubén Ignacio Moreira Valdez Fourth
Second Fourth
Second Fourth
Second Fourth
Second Fifth PAN
Second Fifth Laura Angélica Rojas Hernández
Second PRD Fifth
Second Antonio Ortega Martínez Fifth
Second Carlos Alberto Puente Salas PVEM Fifth
Second Beatriz Manrique Guevara Fifth Gloria Romero Leon
Second Francisco Elizondo Garrido Fifth Enrique Ochoa Reza PRI
Second MC Fifth Ana Lilia Herrera Anzaldo
Second Morena Fifth
Second Fifth
Second Miguel Ángel Chico Herrera Fifth Brasil Acosta Peña
Second Fifth Ximena Puente de la Mora
Second Fifth
Second Fifth Laura Barrera Fortoul
Second Fifth Carlos Torres Piña PRD
Second Fifth
Second Fifth Javier Salinas Narváez
Second Fifth PT
Second Fifth PVEM
Second Fifth
Third PAN Fifth MC
Third Fifth
Third Fifth Morena
Third Carlos Alberto Morales Vázquez Fifth
Third Fifth
Third Fifth
Third Fifth
Third PRI Fifth Horacio Duarte Olivares
Third Dulce María Sauri Riancho Fifth
Third Héctor Yunes Landa Fifth
Third Fifth
Third Fifth
Third Fifth
Third Fifth
Third Norma Azucena Rodríguez Zamora PRD Fifth
Third Manuel García Corpus Fifth
Third PT Fifth
Third Jorge Emilio González Martínez PVEM Fifth
Third Fifth
Third MC Fifth

Notes[]

  1. ^ Alternate to Angélica García Arrieta, who died in office on 22 December 2018.
  2. ^ Alfonso Durazo Montaño took leave on November 8, 2018, in advance of being appointed by President López Obrador to head the new Secretariat of Security and Civilian Protection.
  3. ^ Sworn in on February 28, 2019, after José Antonio Álvarez Lima took leave to accept his appointment to head Canal Once. Died on October 24, 2020, of COVID-19.
  4. ^ Replaced Rafael Moreno Valle Rosas on January 2, 2019, after Moreno Valle died in the 2018 Puebla helicopter crash.
  5. ^ Miguel Acundo González died of COVID-19 on September 16, 2020.
  6. ^ Roger Aguilar Salazar, who was elected to the seat, died on September 5, 2018 and was never sworn in. Interian Gallegos was sworn in on September 13.

References[]

  1. ^ Balderas, Óscar (23 July 2018). "México gana 'medalla de bronce' por alcanzar la equidad de género en el Senado". HuffPost México (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 August 2018.
  2. ^ "México entra al top 5 de los Congresos con mayor equidad". Capital (in Spanish). 23 July 2018. Retrieved 10 August 2018.
  3. ^ López Ponce, Jannet (16 March 2017). "Aprueba el INE nuevos distritos electorales". Milenio (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 August 2018.
  4. ^ López, Lorena (23 August 2018). "Oposición impugnará reparto de curules en el Congreso". Milenio (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 August 2018.

External links[]

See also[]

  • Category:Deputies of the LXIV Legislature of Mexico
Retrieved from ""