Asked by dom
mexico government
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Do you mean an overview of how Mexico’s government is organized, who currently holds power, recent politics, how to contact government offices/consulates, or something else?
Brief overview (pick what you want me to expand):
- System: Federal presidential republic with separation of powers (executive, legislative, judicial).
- Executive: President is head of state and government; serves a single six‑year term (no re‑election).
- Legislature: Bicameral Congress (Congreso de la Unión)
- Chamber of Deputies: 500 members (300 by single‑member districts, 200 by proportional representation).
- Senate: 128 members (each state + Mexico City elects 3 senators; additional senators by national PR).
- Judiciary: Supreme Court of Justice (Suprema Corte de Justicia) heads the federal judiciary; other federal tribunals include the Electoral Tribunal.
- Subnational: 31 states + Mexico City (formerly the Federal District); states have governors and local legislatures.
- Key independent institutions: National Electoral Institute (INE), Bank of Mexico (Banxico), National Human Rights Commission, etc.
- Major parties (examples): Morena, PAN, PRI, PRD, Movimiento Ciudadano — party strength shifts with recent elections.
Tell me which aspect you want (structure, current leaders and party makeup, recent election results, how laws are made, how to access services or contact an office, or something else) and I’ll give detailed, up‑to‑date information.
Brief overview (pick what you want me to expand):
- System: Federal presidential republic with separation of powers (executive, legislative, judicial).
- Executive: President is head of state and government; serves a single six‑year term (no re‑election).
- Legislature: Bicameral Congress (Congreso de la Unión)
- Chamber of Deputies: 500 members (300 by single‑member districts, 200 by proportional representation).
- Senate: 128 members (each state + Mexico City elects 3 senators; additional senators by national PR).
- Judiciary: Supreme Court of Justice (Suprema Corte de Justicia) heads the federal judiciary; other federal tribunals include the Electoral Tribunal.
- Subnational: 31 states + Mexico City (formerly the Federal District); states have governors and local legislatures.
- Key independent institutions: National Electoral Institute (INE), Bank of Mexico (Banxico), National Human Rights Commission, etc.
- Major parties (examples): Morena, PAN, PRI, PRD, Movimiento Ciudadano — party strength shifts with recent elections.
Tell me which aspect you want (structure, current leaders and party makeup, recent election results, how laws are made, how to access services or contact an office, or something else) and I’ll give detailed, up‑to‑date information.
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