MEXICO CITY — Mexico's Senate has voted to eliminate seven independent regulatory and oversight agencies, a move that critics warn will cement the ruling party's power and avoid outside scrutiny.
President Claudia Sheinbaum calls it a money-saving measure, arguing that the government can more efficiently handle functions like freedom of information requests, anti-monopoly enforcement and energy-market regulation.
However, foreign investors and critics fear this could open the door to favoritism and a lack of transparency.
What does this mean for the public's right to know?
The Senate vote Thursday — which will likely be confirmed by two-thirds of state legislatures controlled by Sheinbaum's Morena party — eliminates the independent body that had powers to force government departments to hand over information based on requests filed by citizens. Now, presumably, each government department will decide what to hand over.
Adrián Alcalá, head of the National Institute for Information Access, said each department may be able to set its own rules and impose its own criteria. ''When you fragment something, it tends to disappear,'' Alcalá said.
Did people really see any value in the agencies?
In the first nine months of 2024, people submitted more that 275,000 requests for government files, and more than four million freedom-of information requests have been received since the National Institute for Information Access — formerly known by another name — was set up 20 years ago. Those requests include everything from government budgets and contracts, to labor and human rights issues. Sarahí Salvatierra, of the public policy research group Fundar, said "transparency and informing the public are the cornerstones of democracy.''