Mexican Senators hit Wednesday after a tumultuous discussion of alleged opposed calls for the United States Intervene military against drug cartel.
MP Alejandro Moreno, the leader of the opposition party, went to the podium while the session ended on Wednesday and angrily faced the President of Senate Gerard Fernardez Noron of the ruling Morena party because he did not get Kat.
Moreno can be seen ua Video posted on social networks Mexican Senate several times pushing Fernandez Norone, hitting him with his neck and pushing another man to the ground when he tried to intervene.
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The lock came after a fierce discussion during which the opposition was accused of calling for American military intervention, claiming to deny both parties.
Norona later said she would appeal against Moreno for bodily injuries and request that his legislative immunity be recalled.
“The debate could be very sharp, very outraged, very strong … Today when (opposition legislators) are exposed to their betrayal, they lose their mind because they were exposed,” he said.
Moreno accused Noron of launching an attack by saying on the social media platform X: “He was the one who started the attack; he did it because he could not silence us with arguments.”
“The first physical aggression came from Norone,” ” Moreno wrote on x. “He threw his first pushed, and did it from a cowardice.”
Both senators are included in separate controversy.
Moreno faces possible procedures for imperialation due to alleged corruption during his mandate as a governor of Campeche State from 2015 to 2019.
Norona was criticized for a report that she owns a expensive house at a time when Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum urged public officers to live modestly.
Trump targets Latin American drug cartel
President Donald Trump directed Pentagon use military force He considered Latin American drug cartels to be terrorist organizations, the source familiar with this issue was confirmed by CBS News earlier this month. It is not clear whether or when the army could take measures.
For his part, Mexico emphasized that “he will not accept the participation of US military forces in our territory.” Earlier this month, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum insisted lest there be “no invasion of Mexico”.
In February, Trump’s administration labeled Eight drug trade groups as a terrorist organization. Six are Mexican, one is Venezuelan, and the eighth comes from El Salvador.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said earlier this month that the administration could use marks to “target” cartel.
“It allows us to target what they do now and to use other elements of the US power, intelligence agencies, the Ministry of Defense, whatever … we are aiming for these groups if we have the opportunity to do it,” Rubio said. “We have to start treating them as armed terrorist organizations, not just drug organizations.”
Venezuela on Tuesday arranged warships and unmanned aircraft to patrol the coast of the country after the United States sent three destroyers to the region to control drug trafficking.







