Las noticias con La Mont, 28 de noviembre de 2023

Premio Internacional Periodismo Y Periodismo Migrante*📃 

La Información Directa a tu Celular 📲 de HOY *Martes 28 de Noviembre 2023* *En El Plano Nacional e Internacional*:

*Ahora también ya estamos en la redes y síguenos a través de nuestros siguientes medios:*

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*Colaboración Especial En:* http://MexicoTodayUSA.com

*Gold Bars and Tokyo Apartments: How Money Is Flowing Out of China.*

Chinese families are sending money overseas, a sign of worry about the country’s economic and political future. But a cheaper currency is also helping exports.

Affluent Chinese have moved hundreds of billions of dollars out of the country this year, seizing on the end of Covid precautions that had almost completely sealed China’s borders for nearly three years.

They are using their savings to buy overseas apartments, stocks and insurance policies. Able to fly again to Tokyo, London and New York, Chinese travelers have bought apartments in Japan and poured money into accounts in the United States or Europe that pay higher interest than in China, where rates are low and falling.

The outbound shift of money in part indicates unease inside China about the sputtering recovery after the pandemic as well as deeper problems, like an alarming slowdown in real estate, the main storehouse of wealth for families. For some people, it is also a reaction to fears about the direction of the economy under China’s leader, Xi Jinping, who has cracked down on business and strengthened the government’s hand in many aspects of society.

In some cases, Chinese are improvising to get around China’s strict government controls on transferring money overseas. They have bought gold bars small enough to be scattered unobtrusively through carry-on luggage, as well as large stacks of foreign currency.

Real estate is an option, too. Chinese have emerged as the main buyers of Tokyo apartments costing $3 million or more, and they often pay with suitcases of cash, said Zhao Jie, the chief executive of Shenjumiaosuan, an online real estate listing service in Tokyo. “It’s really hard work to count this kind of cash.”

Before the pandemic, he said, Chinese buyers typically bought Tokyo studio apartments for $330,000 or less to rent out. Now they are buying much larger units and obtaining investment visas to relocate their families.

All told, an estimated $50 billion a month has been taken out of China this year, mainly by Chinese households and private-sector companies.

Experts said the pace of money leaving China probably did not pose an imminent risk to the country’s $17 trillion economy, in large part because exports of many of the country’s key manufactured goods are strong, returning a steady stream of cash.

A broader move by families to send their savings elsewhere could be cause for alarm. Large-scale money outflows have set off financial crises in recent decades in Latin America, Southeast Asia and even China itself, in late 2015 and early 2016.

So far, the Chinese government is indicating that it believes it has the situation under control. Money sluicing out of China has weakened the currency, the renminbi, against the dollar and other currencies. And that weakness of the renminbi has helped sustain China’s exports, which support tens of millions of Chinese jobs.

*Israel-Hamas War As Truce Appears to Hold, Israeli Leaders Face a Tough Choice*

The decision by Israel and Hamas to extend their brief truce in Gaza has created short-term benefits for both sides but amplified uncertainty about how, when and whether Israel will continue its invasion of Gaza.

The agreement, announced by Qatar, to prolong the cease-fire from four days to six has raised expectations that both sides will agree to more short extensions. And if the cease-fire does grow longer, there will be greater external pressure on Israel to make it permanent, and greater internal pressure to end it.

The decision by Israel and Hamas to extend their brief truce in Gaza has created short-term benefits for both sides but amplified uncertainty about how, when and whether Israel will continue its invasion of Gaza.

The agreement, announced by Qatar, to prolong the cease-fire from four days to six has raised expectations that both sides will agree to more short extensions. And if the cease-fire does grow longer, there will be greater external pressure on Israel to make it permanent, and greater internal pressure to end it.

Each side accused the other on Tuesday of violating the truce, the first time either has made such an allegation since the agreement went into effect last Friday. The Israeli military said that explosive devices were detonated near its troops in two places in northern Gaza, and that militants in one area fired on them. Hamas said its fighters had engaged in a “field clash” provoked by Israel, without offering additional details.

But neither side signaled that it was pulling out of the agreement.

For now, small extensions serve both Hamas and Israel.

Hamas can prolong its control of most of Gaza after being routed in northern parts of the territory since Israel invaded more than a month ago. A longer pause would give Hamas more time to regroup and reposition its forces, and more aid could be delivered from Egypt to Gaza’s 2.2 million residents, most of whom have been displaced by the fighting and face profound food and fuel shortages.

Israel gets to welcome back more of the roughly 240 hostages who were captured by Hamas and its allies at the start of the war on Oct. 7. For every extra day of the cease-fire, the two sides have agreed to exchange roughly 10 Israelis for 30 Palestinians jailed by Israel. The return of the missing Israelis, many of them women and children, has provided a huge boost for the Israeli public, much of which follows every exchange closely.

But the longer that dynamic lasts, the greater Israel’s conundrum.

Each daily prisoner release boosts Hamas’s popularity in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where many of the freed Palestinians have returned, and where Hamas and other armed groups are waging a low-level insurgency.

A long pause slows the momentum of Israel’s invasion, endangering its stated goal of removing Hamas from power. Already, Biden administration officials say they have pushed Israel to fight more surgically once it returns to its invasion, as international pressure builds on Israel to stop its attacks entirely.

Most of all, some Israelis fear that a prolonged extension would give Hamas too much influence over the Israeli psyche, said Anshel Pfeffer, a political commentator for Haaretz, a left-leaning Israeli newspaper.

The capture of so many hostages, including a 9-month-old baby, traumatized many Israelis.

The complicated hostage release process, fraught by delays and disagreements between Hamas and Israel, has heightened that torment.

“Israel faces a real dilemma,” said Mr. Pfeffer. “With each hostage release, Hamas holds the whip hand over Israeli emotions. Ultimately, Israel will have to decide between freeing more hostages — or preventing Hamas from dictating the mood of the country.”

Some analysts say domestic pressures will probably prompt Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to revive the invasion sooner rather than later. A delayed resumption of the attack would put Mr. Netanyahu on a collision course with far-right government ministers who grudgingly supported the cease-fire because they were assured that the invasion would continue after only a short truce.

*Fearful, Humiliated and Desperate: Gazans Heading South Face Horrors*

Tens of thousands of Gazans are making the most difficult of choices, leaving their homes behind to survive.

They walked for hours, raising their hands when they encountered Israeli troops with guns trained on them to display their I.D. cards — or wave white rags. All around them was the sound of gunfire and the incessant buzzing of drones. Bodies littered rubble-filled streets.

For the tens of thousands of Gazans who have fled the northern part of the enclave where the heaviest fighting has been taking place, evacuating to the south has been a perilous journey, according to at least 10 Gazans that The New York Times spoke to on the ground and by phone. Even though a tenuous cease-fire in place since Friday has brought temporary relief from the bombardment, they face an uncertain future — and the threat the strikes will return, leaving them displaced yet again.

The Israeli military launched a deadly bombing campaign of the Gaza Strip after an attack on Israel by Hamas on Oct. 7 in which, Israeli officials say, 1,200 people were killed and 240 taken hostage. In the seven weeks since, Israel has pounded the tiny coastal enclave with the aim of destroying Hamas’s military capabilities. So far, more than 13,000 Palestinians have been killed as of Nov. 21, according to the Gazan health authorities.

For weeks, Israel has been urging Gazans living in northern towns to flee along Salah al-Din Street, the strip’s main north-south highway.

Those lucky enough or with means fled early, but some Gazans who spoke to the Times said they could not leave earlier because they do not have relatives or anyone they know in the south, cannot leave older family members behind or don’t have the resources. Instead, many sheltered in increasingly dangerous and desperate conditions at schools or hospitals in the north. But at some point, they made the difficult decision to leave.

Even that decision was fraught. In the weeks leading up to the cease-fire, Israel has also bombed the southern part of the Gaza Strip, and some Gazans feel uprooting themselves further with no guarantee of shelter in the south is not worth it.

The United Nations says 1.7 million of the 2.3 million residents in the Hamas-controlled enclave have been displaced.

The Gazans who spoke to The Times said they felt shame, loss of dignity and anger at finding themselves struggling for their lives in the latest war between Israel and Hamas. The journey — which takes Gazans hours depending on where in the north they are leaving from — is usually done on foot or on a donkey cart.

Aya Habboub, 23, remained in northern Gaza earlier this month, heavily pregnant with her third child. She gave birth in a hospital under intense bombardment but was forced to evacuate when the baby, whom she named Tia, was just four days old.

Barely able to walk, Ms. Habboub tried to rest by the side of the road, but her husband urged her to keep going. Israeli soldiers, she said, stopped her mother-in-law and ordered the woman to stand for half an hour and raise her hands.

“Then they were firing,” Ms. Habboub said, “and we started running.” Ms. Habboub was speaking in a hospital in Deir al-Balah, a city in central Gaza, where many are sheltering. In her lap, Tia, cocooned in a white cloth, was sleeping peacefully.

“I dropped my baby,” she said. “I was crying and screaming.”

Several Gazans whom The Times spoke to described similar scenes of soldiers firing in the general vicinity of those fleeing. It was not possible to verify independently such claims.

The Israel Defense Forces did not comment on the specific allegations. In a statement responding to questions about them, the military said it had taken “significant precautions to mitigate civilian harm.” It added that it had issued warnings of airstrikes ahead of time, when it can do so, and told civilians when to make use of “safe corridors” to evacuate.

It reiterated its assertion that Hamas has embedded itself within “civilian infrastructure” and uses civilians as human shields. “The I.D.F. is determined to end these attacks, and as such we will strike Hamas wherever necessary,” it said.

*Analyzing Bernie Sanders’s Vision for Mideast Peace*

To the Editor:

Re “Palestinians Must Have Hope for a Brighter Future,” by Bernie Sanders (Opinion guest essay, Nov. 23):

Senator Sanders states what has been obvious for decades to all who support two states living in peace, prosperity and dignity: The violence must end. The question is, how?

Each act of brutality radicalizes the other side. In this long struggle, extremists on both sides scuttle every hope for compromise and ensure the endless cycle of murder and retaliation.

The U.S. can pressure Israel by curtailing or attaching conditions to aid. Who or what can pressure Hamas and its allies? What, specifically, can disempower the Islamic radicals, defang the Israeli settlers and offer a path toward a commitment to peaceful coexistence on both sides?

Those who claim that Hamas’s war is somehow justified by Israeli actions (heinous as they may be) ignore its stated goal of eradicating Israel and killing Jews. Ultimately, this is a regional problem that requires a regional solution.

Senator Sanders and other peace-loving Americans must call on those Arab states that support Palestinian extremists to end their support and work toward genuine transformation.

I support Senator Sanders’s vision, but he doesn’t propose a concrete path forward, without which nothing will change.

Ellen W. Kaplan
Raleigh, N.C.

To the Editor:

While Senator Bernie Sanders offers what he believes to be constructive steps for Israel-Palestinian rapprochement, his prescription places nearly all of the obligations upon Israel. Of the 1,517 words in the senator’s essay, only these 13 words — “new Palestinian leadership will be required as part of a wider political process” — are demanded of the Palestinians. Not enough, in my opinion.

Here are just a handful of steps the Palestinians could take to demonstrate seriousness and good faith: Once and for all recognize Israel’s right to exist as an independent and sovereign Jewish state; hold free and fair Palestinian elections to put into place the new leadership Senator Sanders calls for; demand, without equivocation, Hamas’s permanent removal from Gaza and reject its political ideology committed to Israel’s destruction; cease providing financial compensation to the families of individuals who commit acts of terror against Israelis; remove antisemitic and historically inaccurate propaganda contained in textbooks used in Palestinian schools; reject the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (B.D.S.) movement targeted against Israel; and, finally, demonstrate a willingness to accept the peace proposals offered by Israel in previous rounds of failed negotiations, proposals that were continually rejected by the Palestinians under Yasir Arafat and Mahmoud Abbas.

Senator Sanders has articulated what Israel must do to advance peace in his view, but in order to balance the peace equation there is clearly much that the Palestinians can and must do to end the perpetual cycle of violence.

Mark S. Freedman
Parkland, Fla.
The writer is the North American board chair of the Pardes Institute of Jewish Studies, based in Jerusalem.

To the Editor:

Senator Bernie Sanders’s essay was well balanced, educational and pragmatic.

I wish the senator would have completed his comparison of deaths to date in the Gaza war. While the equivalent of 1,200 Israeli deaths on a per capita basis in the United States would be a shocking 40,000 lives, Senator Sanders didn’t say what the equivalent of 12,000 Palestinian deaths would be.

Perhaps he did the math and didn’t want to write down the unimaginable figure of almost two million.

I hope for a resolution of this war so there are no more needless civilian deaths on either side.

Harry Irwin
Cambridge, Mass.

*Rosalynn Carter to Be Honored by Presidents and Fellow First Ladies*

Former President Jimmy Carter will emerge from hospice care to join a cast of political heavyweights paying tribute on Tuesday to Mrs. Carter, who died at 96 last week at her home in Plains, Ga.

Former President Jimmy Carter will emerge from hospice care to join some of his successors and every living presidential spouse on Tuesday to honor Rosalynn Carter, his wife and partner of more than three-quarters of a century and the nation’s first lady from 1977 to 1981, the Carter Center said.

Mr. Carter, who turned 99 last month and has rarely been seen in public since entering hospice care in February, made the 140-mile journey from the couple’s home in Plains, Ga., to Atlanta for a tribute at Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church at Emory University. President Biden, former President Bill Clinton and all five living first ladies will attend as well.

Mrs. Carter, who was suffering from dementia, died at 96 last week at the family’s modest ranch-style house in Plains just a few months after she and her husband had celebrated their 77th wedding anniversary, making them the longest-enduring presidential couple in American history. Frail but alert and smiling, the two made their last public appearance together in September when they were driven around the Plains Peanut Festival.

Born at her family’s house in Plains, the tiny town where she would live most of her life, Eleanor Rosalynn Smith as a young girl might have been surprised at the star-studded turnout expected to salute her at the end. Her father drove a school bus, owned an auto repair shop and ran a farm, while her mother sold milk from their one cow, worked in the school lunchroom and later joined the post office.

Rosalynn Carter, as she became known after marrying her childhood friend’s older brother, never forgot her humble roots, even as she made her way to the White House, traveled the world representing her country, pushed to improve mental health services and transformed the role of first lady. After Mr. Carter lost re-election, the two returned to the small house they had built in 1961 and focused on philanthropic activities for most of the last four decades.

In addition to Mr. Biden and Mr. Clinton, the attendees at Tuesday’s service will include Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff; Jill Biden, the current first lady; former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton; three other former first ladies, Laura Bush, Michelle Obama and Melania Trump; Gov. Brian Kemp and Georgia’s first lady, Marty Kemp; and Mayor Andre Dickens of Atlanta.

None of the high-profile attendees are scheduled to speak. The ceremony will reflect Mrs. Carter’s taste for simple elegance over modern glitz. Her grandchildren will serve as honorary pallbearers, with remarks or readings from her son James Earl Carter III, known as Chip; her daughter, Amy Carter; one of her grandsons; and three of her great-grandchildren.

The Rev. Mark Westmoreland, the pastor of Glenn Memorial, and Tony Lowden, the personal pastor of Mr. and Mrs. Carter, will address the service, and tributes will be delivered by Kathryn Cade, a longtime aide and friend; Judy Woodruff, the former anchor of “PBS NewsHour”; and Jason Carter, her grandson and chairman of the Carter Center board.

Musical selections will be offered by members of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, David Osborne, Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood.

Mrs. Carter will then be taken back to Plains, where on Wednesday after a funeral service at Maranatha Baptist Church, she will be buried at the Carter Home and Garden, part of the Jimmy Carter National Historical Park. Mr. Carter plans to be laid to rest next to her when the time comes.

*A Neurologist’s Tips to Protect Your Memory*

A new book by a renowned brain expert says there are a few simple things we can do to prevent memory decline as we age.

As we age, our memory declines. This is an ingrained assumption for many of us; however, according to neuroscientist Dr. Richard Restak, a neurologist and clinical professor at George Washington Hospital University School of Medicine and Health, decline is not inevitable.

The author of more than 20 books on the mind, Dr. Restak has decades’ worth of experience in guiding patients with memory problems. “The Complete Guide to Memory: The Science of Strengthening Your Mind,” Dr. Restak’s latest book, includes tools such as mental exercises, sleep habits and diet that can help boost memory.

Yet Dr. Restak ventures beyond this familiar territory, considering every facet of memory — how memory is connected to creative thinking, technology’s impact on memory, how memory shapes identity. “The point of the book is to overcome the everyday problems of memory,” Dr. Restak said.

Especially working memory, which falls between immediate recall and long-term memory, and is tied to intelligence, concentration and achievement. According to Dr. Restak, this is the most critical type of memory, and exercises to strengthen it should be practiced daily. But bolstering all memory skills, he added, is key to warding off later memory issues.

Memory decline is not inevitable with aging, Dr. Restak argues in the book. Instead, he points to 10 “sins,” or “stumbling blocks that can lead to lost or distorted memories.” Seven were first described by the psychologist and memory specialist Daniel Lawrence Schacter — “sins of omission,” such as absent-mindedness, and “sins of commission,” such as distorted memories. To those Dr. Restak added three of his own: technological distortion, technological distraction and depression.

Ultimately, “we are what we can remember,” he said. Here are some of Dr. Restak’s tips for developing and maintaining a healthy memory.

Pay more attention.
Some memory lapses are actually attention problems, not memory problems. For instance, if you’ve forgotten the name of someone you met at a cocktail party, it could be because you were talking with several people at the time and you didn’t properly pay attention when you heard it.

“Inattention is the biggest cause for memory difficulties, ” Dr. Restak said. “It means you didn’t properly encode the memory.”

One way to pay attention when you learn new information, like a name, is to visualize the word. Having a picture associated with the word, Restak said, can improve recall. For instance, he recently had to memorize the name of a doctor, Dr. King, (an easy example, he acknowledged). So he pictured a male doctor “in a white coat with a crown on his head and a scepter instead of a stethoscope in his hand.”

Find regular everyday memory challenges.
There are many memory exercises that you can integrate into everyday life. Dr. Restak suggested composing a grocery list and memorizing it. When you get to the store, don’t automatically pull out your list (or your phone) — instead, pick up everything according to your memory.

“Try to see the items in your mind,” he said, and only consult the list at the end, if necessary. If you’re not going to the store, try memorizing a recipe. He added that frequent cooking is actually a great way to improve working memory.

Once in a while, get in the car without turning on your GPS, and try to navigate through the streets from memory. A small 2020 study suggested that people who used GPS more frequently over time showed a steeper cognitive decline in spatial memory three years later.

En Central de Inteligencia Política (CIP) realizamos semanalmente el estudio ARMA de los aspirantes a la Jefatura de Gobierno de la CDMX. En esta ocasión, el análisis abarca el periodo del 20 al 27 de noviembre de 2023.

*Aspirantes con mayor cobertura:*
1. Santiago Taboada (105 mdp)
2. Clara Brugada (75 mdp)
3. Salomón Chertorivski (21 mdp)

*Aspirantes con mayor cobertura positiva:*
1. Clara Brugada (48 mdp)
2. Salomón Chertorivski (0 mdp)
3. Santiago Taboada (-26 mdp)

Col. Candelero 27 11 23

Riesgo de más
inseguridad por las
campañas electorales

x.- Fechas de las jornadas proselitistas “para que estés a las vivas”.
x.- Equipo de Claudia.

Abraham Mohamed Z.

La agitación y acelere con violencia que ya se registra en ciertos Estados de la República, se detonó por las pre campañas políticas que ya empezaron en éste mes de Noviembre y esto presagia, sin ser agorero de lo peor, que conforme avance el tiempo hacia las mega elecciones del 2024 la situación empeorará por los intereses de todo tipo que están en juego, y en las que la narco delincuencia, se infiere, que también participa porque evidentemente es una fuerza real de poder. 
Para mediatizar éste gran riesgo de violencia atroz, esperemos que el gobierno del presidente López Obrador desarrolle una estrategia que garantice seguridad para las actividades de proselitismo que realicen en sus campañas formales los y las más de 20 mil candidat@s que aspiran a tener poder gubernamental, y ell@s a su vez, deben moderarse en las descalificaciones o críticas que se hagan pues, de no hacerlo, éstas próximas elecciones pueden pasar a la historia como la más violenta de la historia contemporánea.
Te voy a dar a conocer las fechas de pre campañas y campañas para que como ciudadano “estés a las vivas” en este singular y riesgoso proceso electoral donde hasta al presidente de la República “ya le mientan la madre” 
Este 20 de noviembre se iniciaron las pre campañas por la Presidencia de México, sin embargo, no será el único cargo en disputa en las elecciones del 2 de Junio del 2024, pues también se renovarán ocho gubernaturas, la Jefatura de Gobierno de la Ciudad de México, el Congreso Federal (Senadores y Diputados), así como cerca de 20,000 cargos de elección popular.
Como te adelanté, cada Entidad tendrá su ajetreo según el calendario aprobado por el INE 
Aquí están fechas y lugares de las pre campañas y campañas formales y, además, los cargos públicos que serán disputados: 
CIUDAD DE MÉXICO
En la Capital de la República, además de la Jefatura de Gobierno, se elegirán también los 16 nuevos Alcaldes, 204 Concejales; 34 Diputados de Mayoría Relativa y 32 más de Representación Proporcional
La pre campaña para la Jefatura de Gobierno empezó el 5 de Noviembre y termina el 3 de Enero próximo. La campaña formal empieza en 1 de Marzo y acaba el 29 de Mayo.
La pre campaña para Diputaciones y Alcaldías empezó este 25 de Noviembre y finaliza el 3 de Enero. La campaña formal para Diputaciones y Alcaldías será del 31 de Marzo al 29 de Mayo de 2024.
CHIAPAS
Se renovará la Gubernatura, 123 Presidencias Municipales, 875 Regidurías, 123 Sindicaturas y 24 Diputaciones de Mayoría Relativa y 16 Diputaciones de Representación Proporcional, 
La pre campaña para la Gubernatura será del 22 de Enero al 10 de Febrero y la campaña formal empezará el 31 de Marzo para terminar el 29 de mayo.
La pre campaña para las Diputaciones y Ayuntamientos será del 1 al 10 de febrero y la campaña formal del 30 de abril al 29 de mayo.
GUANAJUATO
Se renovarán la Gubernatura, 46 Presidencias Municipales, 418 Regidurías, 52 Sindicaturas y 22 Diputaciones de Mayoría Relativa y 14 Diputaciones de Representación Proporcional.
La pre campaña para Gobernador empezó este 25 de Noviembre y termina el 21 de Enero. La campaña formal inicia el 2 de Marzo y cierra el 29 de Mayo.
Pre campaña para Ayuntamientos del 13 de Diciembre al 21 de Enero y la campaña formal del 31 de Marzo al 29 de Mayo.
Pre campaña para Diputaciones del 23 de Diciembre al 21 de Enero y campaña del 15 de Abril al 29 de Mayo.
JALISCO
Los jaliscienses votarán por Gobernador, 125 Presidencias Municipales 1,231 Regidurías, 125 Sindicaturas y 20 Diputaciones de Mayoría Relativa y además 18 Diputaciones de Representación Proporcional, 
Pre campaña para Gubernatura empezó el 5 de Noviembre y termina el 3 de Enero. La campaña formal iniciará el 1 de Marzo y acabará el 29 de Mayo.
Pre campaña para Diputaciones y Ayuntamientos inició este 25 de Noviembre y se termina el 3 de Enero. La campaña formal será del 31 de Marzo al 29 de Mayo.
MORELOS
Se elegirán Gobernador, 33 Presidencias Municipales, 153 Regidurías, 33 Sindicaturas y 12 Diputaciones de Mayoría Relativa y también 8 Diputaciones de Representación Proporcional. 
La pre campaña para la Gubernatura inició el pasado 25 de Noviembre y termina el 3 de Enero. La campaña formal iniciará el 31 de Marzo y terminará el 29 de mayo.
Mientras la pre campaña para Diputaciones y Ayuntamientos morelenses iniciará el 5 de Diciembre para terminar el 3 de Enero para reanudar el proselitismo en campaña formal del 15 de Abril al 29 de Mayo.
PUEBLA
Puebla también renovará la Gubernatura, 217 Presidencias Municipales, 1,818 Regidurías, 217 Sindicaturas y 26 Diputaciones de Mayoría Relativa y además 15 Diputaciones de Representación Proporcional.
La pre campaña para la Gubernatura será del 25 de Diciembre al 3 de Enero y la campaña del 31 de Marzo al 29 de Mayo.
Te informo que las pre campañas y campañas formales para Diputaciones y Ayuntamientos se harán en la misma fecha que para la gubernatura. 
TABASCO
Además de la Gubernatura, aquí se renovarán 17 Presidencias Municipales, 51 Regidurías, 17 Sindicaturas de Mayoría Relativa, 21 Diputaciones de Mayoría Relativa y 14 Diputaciones de Representación Proporcional.
La pre campaña para Gubernatura empezó el 15 de Noviembre y terminará el 3 de Enero. Y del 16 de marzo al 29 de mayo será el tiempo de campaña formal.
Aquí también la pre campaña y campaña para Diputaciones y Ayuntamientos se hará en las mismas fechas que las fijadas para la Gubernatura.
VERACRUZ
Los veracruzanos renovarán la Gubernatura, 30 Diputaciones de Mayoría Relativa y 20 Diputaciones de Representación Proporcional.
La pre campaña para Gubernatura será del 2 de Enero al 10 de Febrero y la campaña formal del 31 de Marzo al 29 de Mayo.
Pre campaña para Diputaciones del 22 de Enero al 10 de Febrero y campaña del 30 de Abril al 29 de Mayo.
YUCATÁN
Los yucatecos también elegirán Gobernador, 106 Presidencias Municipales, 587 Regidurías, 106 Sindicaturas y 21 Diputaciones de Mayoría Relativa y además 14 Diputaciones de Representación Proporcional, 
La pre campaña para la Gubernatura inició el 5 de Noviembre 2023 y termina el 3 de Enero y la campaña será del 1 de Marzo al 29 de Mayo.
Las pre campañas para Diputaciones y Ayuntamientos son del 25 de Noviembre al 3 de Enero y las campañas formales empezarán el 31 de marzo para terminar el 29 de Mayo.

ADENDUM:

Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo presentó su equipo de colaboradores encabezado por el dirigente de MORENA:

Mario Delgado, Coordinador de Pre Campaña. 
Adán Augusto López, Coordinador Político.
Ricardo Monreal, Coordinador de Enlace Territorial.
Tatiana Clouthier, Coordinadora de Voceros.
Jesús Valdés Peña, Coordinador de Enlace con Organizaciones Internacionales y mexicanos en el exterior.
Gerardo Fernández Noroña, Coordinador de Enlace con Organizaciones Sociales y Civiles y vocero de la precampaña.
Citlalli Hernández, Coordinadora de Alianzas para Coaliciones y Candidaturas Unicas.
Renata Turrent, Coordinadora de Enlace con Sectores Académicos.
Regina Orozco, Coordinadora de Enlace con la Comunidad Cultural.
Estela Damián, Coordinadora de Giras.

Los comentarios son de que “van con todo” para continuar con la 4T del jefazo López Obrador, convencidos de que van ganar sin problemas en el 2024 la Presidencia de la República, la Jefatura de Gobierno de la CDMX, la mayoría de las Gubernaturas, los escaños y curules del Senado y Cámara de Diputados, Congresos locales, Alcaldías, etc….etc…etc.
Y yo digo: Esperemos por el bien de todos, que la jornada electoral se desarrolle con tranquilidad y termine sin problemas graves como se percibe que pudiera llegar a ocurrir. ¡Ojalá así sea!
mohacan@prodigy.net.mx

El reto de Pepe Yunes https://indicepolitico.com/el-reto-de-pepe-yunes/ @epistolitas en @IndicePolitico

A Xóchitl no sólo le faltan partidos y seguidores que la vean y la traten como verdadera líder, sino sed y hambre de liderar, de ensillar y domar a quienes la quieren montar. Cargarlos de tareas, no cargarlos a ellos.

*ATENTAMENTE*
*MAESTRO FEDERICO LA MONT*

Sent from my iPod

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