Sheinbaum will close her national accountability tour at the Zócalo in Mexico City.

President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo announced that on Sunday, October 5, she will conclude her national accountability tour in Mexico City's Zócalo, to report on the actions taken during her first year in office.
“We submitted our report to Congress and addressed a report to the nation, from the National Palace. But in this case, I said: Why only in Mexico City? We must go to every state in the Republic to deliver the report, to face it, to be accountable to the people,” he said.
While touring the state of Tlaxcala, and previously in Puebla, the president recalled that she had visited nine states since last week, so this tour will continue until closing at the Plaza de la Constitución.
From Andén Park in Apizaco, he highlighted the actions of the Fourth Transformation, which former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador named after winning the 2018 elections.
"Here in Mexico, we water the economy from the bottom up. Resources are given to the majority. And when it's watered from the bottom up, like trees, it flourishes. That's why Mexico is flourishing with the Fourth Transformation of public life," he said.
1st Government Report: results of the Welfare programsHe detailed that of the Welfare Programs: 119,773 people receive the Pension for the Welfare of Older Adults; 19,258 people receive the Pension for the Welfare of People with Disabilities; 23,570 are beneficiaries of Young People Building the Future; 3,066 are beneficiaries of Young People Writing the Future; 53,477 are beneficiaries of the "Benito Juárez" Scholarship; 26,301 are scholarships for children; 27,827 are scholarships for Production for Welfare; 30,000 are scholarships for Free Fertilizers; 4,406 are scholarships for Sowing Life; 109,301 are scholarships for Milk for Welfare; while 671 basic education schools and 47 high schools were affected by the "School is Ours" program. In addition, this year all Mexican women between the ages of 60 and 64 will benefit from the Mujeres Bienestar Pension; in 2026, enrollment of elementary school students for the Rita Cetina Universal Scholarship will begin; and older adults, as well as people with disabilities, are already receiving home visits through House-to-House Health.
He added that the economy is also flourishing because, from 2018 to 2025, the minimum wage has increased by 135 percent, contrary to what happened during the 36 years of the neoliberal period, when the government was run for the benefit of a select few and investors were encouraged, presumably because Mexico's greatest asset was its cheap labor.
Welfare works in TlaxcalaRegarding specific projects in Tlaxcala, he indicated that work is underway on the Santa Ana interchange; the repaving of all federal highways; and the cleanup of the Atoyac River. Additionally, as part of the Housing for Well-being program, the construction of 18,000 homes is being promoted: 6,000 through the National Housing Commission (Conavi) and 12,000 through the National Workers' Housing Fund Institute (Infonavit). Also in the state, 38,000 people are benefiting from mortgage foreclosures, mortgage freezes, and the provision of their deeds free of charge. Additionally, three high schools will be built, as well as a campus of the Rosario Castellanos National University (UNRC), and construction of a campus of the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN) will begin next year. The Women's Hospital will also be built, the Children's Hospital will be expanded, and the Economic Development Center for Well-being (PODECOBI) in Huamantla will be expanded. of 14 Child Education and Care Centers (CECI), of which eight will begin construction next year and in each municipality there will be a FREE Center for women.
Eleconomista