Gerardo Fernández Noroña, deputy for the Labour Party (PT), questioned the discomfort expressed by members of the opposition bloc over the 'bulletinage' that Movimiento Regeneración Nacional (Morena) launched against him.
This, in evoking that the bloc itself boasted that it had protected the homeland after the setback that its suffrage gave to the Electric Reform, promoted by the president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) on April 17 in the Chamber of Deputies.
Hence the “misunderstanding” of the legislator because of the discontent that Morena “points to them with a first and last name”, on the understanding that - according to his argument - they would have done good to the citizens and not a “betrayal” as the cherry party has called it.
Following the dismissal of the Electricity Reform, Mario Delgado, Morena's national leader, and Citlalli Hernández, Secretary - General, announced that” would take action in the matter” against those who voted against the bill.
According to the Fourth Transformation (Q4) bloc, the rejection would mean the cancellation of a large part of the market opening in power generation carried out by former president, Enrique Peña Nieto, in 2013.
For that reason, both Morenoists asked the parliamentary group to “bulletin” the detractor legislators, especially representatives of entities that will hold government elections on June 5.
It should be noted that, to this point, several members of the cherry bench had already labeled those who spoke out against the reform as “traitors” and “sells homelands”, among them, López Obrador himself: “These deputies supported the looters,” he said.
Of course, these acts generated disagreements in the parties of the Va por México and Movimiento Ciudadano (MC) alliance, which have accused these acts of Morena and her allies of aggression.
Such was the case of Marko Cortés, leader of National Action (PAN), who held Mario Delgado responsible for any act, assault or attack that the legislators or he could suffer from the “dangerous” campaign of hatred and violence that he initiated with Hernandez.
“This is yet another example of the autocracy in which President López Obrador wants us to live, where not only is freedom and the right to dissent presented, but also to suppress by intimidating, persecuting and harassing opposition legislators,” he said in a press release.
Meanwhile, Jesús Zambrano, leader of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), described behavior as a “fascistoid attitude” and an obvious persecution against political adversaries.
“What Mario Delgado announces is a fascistoid attitude: starting to personalize to persecute political adversaries; wanting to throw people on anyone who thinks differently,” he failed at a press conference.
Despite what Morena has shown, Ricardo Monreal, party leader in the House of Senators, criticized the action of the militancy and urged her to “serene” to the opponents: “I call on us to act with great serenity and prudence”.
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