The presidential and congressional leaders agreed on an extra session from June 23 to 30.

President Claudia Sheinbaum and parliamentary coordinators Adán Augusto López of the Senate and Ricardo Monreal of the Chamber of Deputies agreed last night that both chambers will hold extraordinary sessions from June 23 to 30, once the federal leader presented the package of reforms and a new law regarding the National Guard.
Thus, next week both chambers will convene their respective committees to issue the necessary opinions, and the Standing Committee can convene the extraordinary session.
But while the chambers of the Congress of the Union will be obliged to move forward as quickly as possible, the Permanent Commission of the Congress of the Union remains unproductive. Although the three working committees were formed last week and were scheduled to meet this week, last night the meetings of the Second Committee, chaired by PAN member Francisco Ramírez Acuña, and the Third Committee, headed by Green Party member Jorge Carlos Ramírez Marín, were canceled.
The Second Committee has 51 issues pending resolution; the Third Committee has 48; and the First Committee, chaired by Morena member Enrique Inzunza, has 35 pending issues and is the only one still scheduled to meet on Wednesday.
During the extraordinary session, the Chamber of Deputies must pass its ruling on two new laws on public security, as well as the new National Guard Law and the reforms to the Organic Law of the Federal Public Administration; the Organic Law of the Mexican Army and Air Force; the Law on Military Education of the Mexican Army and Air Force; the Law on Promotions and Rewards of the Mexican Army and Air Force; the Law on the Social Security Institute for the Mexican Armed Forces; and the Law on Discipline of the Mexican Army and Air Force; as well as the Codes of Military Justice and Military Criminal Procedure.
And the Senate has to pass six more reforms.
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excelsior