The Honorable Congress of the State of Guerrero (Spanish: Honorable Congreso del Estado de Guerrero) is the legislative branch of the government of the State of Guerrero. The Congress is the governmental deliberative body of Guerrero, which is equal to, and independent of, the executive.

Honorable Congress of the State of Guerrero

Honorable Congreso del Estado de Guerrero
LXIV Legislature
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
History
FoundedJanuary 30, 1850 (1850-01-30)[1]
Leadership
President
Jesús Parra García[2], PRI
1st Vice President
Marisol Bazán Fernández, MORENA
2nd Vice President
Gladys Cortés Genchi, PEVM
Structure
Seats46
Political groups
  MORENA (23)
  PRI (6)
  PEVM (6)
  PRD (4)
  PT (4)
  MC (2)
  PAN (1)
Elections
First-past-the-post for 28 electoral district seats and Mixed-member proportional representation for 18 proportional representation seats
Last election
June 2, 2024
Meeting place

Legislative Palace
Chilpancingo, Guerrero, Mexico
Website
congresogro.gob.mx

The Congress is unicameral and consists of 46 deputies. 28 deputies are elected on a first-past-the-post basis, one for each district in which the entity is divided, while 18 are elected through a system of proportional representation. Deputies are elected to serve for a three-year term.

History

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Constituent Congress

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The Constituent Congress was installed on January 30, 1850, in the city of Iguala, which was then the capital of the state. By decree number 32, dated January 12 of the same year, the Local Congress established the territorial division of the State, which was made up of nine electoral districts. The first Electoral Law of the State was enacted on October 6, 1851.[3]

In the Provisional Organic Law for the Internal Arrangement of the State, enacted in March 1850, the figure of the Government Council was established, which had permanent deputation functions and was made up of three Councilors appointed by the Congress.

The State Congress has had different headquarters, the first in the city of Iguala in the first three months of the year 1850; The second was in Ciudad Guerrero from April 1850 until 1871, and finally, the city of Chilpancingo de los Bravo, which was definitively declared the seat of the three branches of government.

I Legislature
Nicolás Bravo
Diego Álvarez
Juan José Calleja
José María Añorve de Salas
Félix María Leyva
Ignacio Castañón
Miguel Ibarra
Ignacio Cid del Prado
Eugenio Vargas
Tomás Gómez
José María Cervantes

Constitutional Congress

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The First Political Constitution of the Free and Sovereign State of Guerrero was published on June 26, 1851. It established that the composition of Congress was unicameral and that the election of its members would be carried out indirectly. Article 52 of this constitutional document established that legislative work would be regulated by an Internal Regulation of Congress.

The Political Constitution of 1851 provided that the Legislative Congress would be renewed by half every two years, with the Deputies with the longest service being elected at the end of each two-year period. Among the most important powers that this Constitution granted to Congress is the appointment of the Governor of the State, based on the proposal of a list of three candidates made by electors appointed by Congress itself.

In 1862, a new Constitution was enacted, which established for the first time the system of direct election of Deputies to the State Congress. Likewise, for the first time, the figure of a permanent deputation, made up of the Deputies themselves, was established.

Through constitutional reforms, in 1874, for the first time, two ordinary sessions were established annually, also indicating that the total renewal of the Congress would take place every two years.

In 1880, the Political Constitution of the State was reformed again, which allowed the number of Deputies to increase to thirteen. These reforms also stipulated that preparatory meetings would be held for the installation of the Legislatures.

In 1917, a new Local Political Constitution was enacted, establishing for the first time, the direct election of the Governor of the State, as well as the documentation of the “electoral district”. In the aforementioned ordinance, the public nature of the sessions was established.

Through Decree Number 86, various important reforms were applied to the Local Political Constitution, which were published in the Official Gazette on December 13, 1950. Among them, the obligation of the State Governor to present an annual report to the Local Congress regarding the state of the different branches of public administration stands out.

On June 2, 1955, the first Internal Regulations of the Chamber of Deputies were promulgated. Through reforms made to the Local Political Constitution, the period of constitutional exercise of the legislatures was extended from two to three years and the figure of Party Deputies was established; through this means, the parties opposed to the Institutional Revolutionary Party were represented for the first time in the State Congress, during the constitutional exercise of the XLIX Legislature, which began its work on February 20, 1978. The Popular Socialist Party was assigned a Deputy.

Through another constitutional reform, in 1984 the number of Deputies was increased, and the possibility of the Congress being made up of up to 18 Deputies was established, 14 elected by first-past-the-post and, where appropriate, by four more elected by proportional representation. Also, for the first time, the issuance of an Organic Law of the Legislative Power was foreseen, which was enacted on June 27, 1985.

The reforms made to the Political Constitution of the State in 1986 established the possibility of the Congress being made up of 26 Legislators: 14 elected by first-past-the-post and up to 12 Deputies assigned by proportional representation.

A new reform applied in 1992 to the aforementioned article, provided that Congress could be composed of up to 46 Deputies, 28 elected by first-past-the-post and up to 14 more assigned by proportional representation, also prescribing the clause of governability in favor of the majority party, to which by law four proportional representation seats should be assigned.

The last reform to article 29 of the State Constitution was carried out in 1996, establishing at 28 the number of Legislators elected by first-past-the-post and up to 18 the number of Deputies elected by proportional representation. The governability clause was eliminated, providing that no political party may have more than 30 Deputies elected by both principles.

Wall of Honor

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The Wall of Honor is a set of surfaces on which the names of national heroes, institutions or individuals recognized for their merits to Guerrero have been inscribed in gilt bronze letters with the aim of rendering them tribute and perpetuate their names in historical memory.

At the center is a stylized backlit carving of the Coat of Arms of the State. Above the coat of arms is the state motto and famous phrase of the insurgent and later President of Mexico Vicente Guerrero:

My homeland comes first.

CUAUHTEMOC MI PATRIA ES PRIMERO JUAN ALVAREZ
PRIMER CONGRESO DE ANAHUAC IGNACIO MANUEL ALTAMIRANO
VICENTE GUERRERO ANDRES FIGUEROA
HERMENEGILDO GALENA ROMULO FIGUEROA
NICOLAS BRAVO FRANCISCO FIGUEROA MATA
VALERIO TRUJANO EDUARDO NERI
ANTONIA NAVA DE CATALAN JUAN R. ESCUDERO
LEONARDO BRAVO DE LA CAMARA TEOFILO OLEA Y LEYVA
JOSE MARIA IZAZAGA EVA SAMANO BISHOP
EUCARIA APREZA GARCIA IGNACIO CHAVEZ SANCHEZ
ALBERTO VAZQUEZ DEL MERCADO CENTENARIO DEL EJERCITO MEXICANO
AMBROSIO FIGUERO MATA 1913-2013
ISIDORO MONTES DE OCA TENIENTE JOSE AZUETA ABAD

Current Composition

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The current LXIV Legislature of the Congress of Guerrero initiated on September 1, 2024 and will conclude on August 31, 2027. The current legislature will be in session concurrent with the governorship of Evelyn Salgado Pineda.

Single Member Districts

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District Constituency Deputy Party
I Chilpancingo Héctor Suárez Basurto   MORENA
II Chilpancingo Diana Bernabé Vega   MORENA
III Acapulco Alejandro Carabias Icaza   PVEM
IV Acapulco Marisol Bazán Fernández   MORENA
V Acapulco Arturo Álvarez Angli   PVEM
VI Acapulco Violeta Martínez Pacheco   MORENA
VII Acapulco Carlos Eduardo Bello Solano   MORENA
VIII Acapulco Marco Tulio Sánchez Alarcón   MORENA
IX Acapulco Joaquín Badillo Escamilla   MORENA
X Tecpan Vladimir Barrera Fuerte   MORENA
XI Petatlán Leticia Rodríguez Armenta   MORENA
XII Zihuatanejo Rafael Martínez Ramírez   MORENA
XIII San Marcos Gladys Cortés Genchi   PVEM
XIV Ayutla Catalina Apolinar Santiago   MORENA
XV Cruz Grande Guadalupe García Villalva   MORENA
XVI Ometepec Claudia Sierra Pérez   PT
XVII Coyuca Víctor Hugo Vega Hernández   PRI
XVIII Ciudad Altamirano Bulmaro Torres Berrum   PRI
XIX Eduardo Neri Citlali Yaret Tellez Castillo   MORENA
XX Teloloapan Robell Urióstegui Patiño   PRD
XXI Taxco de Alarcón Obdulia Naranjo Cabrera   PVEM
XXII Iguala Luissana Ramos Pineda   MORENA
XXIII Huitzuco Ana Lilia Botello Figueroa   MORENA
XXIV Tixtla Jorge Iván Ortega Jiménez   PRD
XXV Chilapa Jesús Parra García   PRI
XXVI Olinalá Pánfilo Sánchez Almazán   PT
XXVII Tlapa Aristóteles Tito Arroyo   MORENA
XXVIII San Luis Acatlán Edgar Ventura de la Cruz   PT

Proportional Representation

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Deputy Party
Gloria Citlali Calixto Jiménez   MORENA
María Guadalupe Eguiluz Bautista   MORENA
Jacinto González Varona   MORENA
Glafira Meraza Prudente   MORENA
Araceli Ocampo Manzanares   MORENA
Pablo Amilcar Sandoval Ballesteros   MORENA
Jesús Eugenio Urióstegui García   MORENA
Alejandro Bravo Abarca   PRI
María Del Pilar Vadillo Ruiz   PRI
Beatriz Vélez Núñez   PRI
Jhobanny Jiménez Mendoza   PVEM
Hilda Jenifer Ponce Mendoza   PVEM
Erika Isabel Guillén Román   PRD
Rebeca Núñez Martín del Campo   PRD
Julián López Galeana   MC
Erika Lorena Lührs Cortés   MC
Leticia Mosso Hernández   PT
Maria Irene Montiel Servín   PAN

Standing Commissions

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The current commissions, presidents and secretaries are:[4]

Commission President Secretary
Political Affairs and Governance Alicia Elizabeth Zamora Villalva   Leticia Castro Ortiz  
Constitutional and Legal Studies Leticia Castro Ortiz   Bernardo Ortega Jiménez  
Budgets and Public Accounts Estrella De la Paz Bernal   Ociel Hugar García Trujillo  
Surveillance and Evaluation of the Higher State Authority Jacinto González Varona   Gabriela Bernal Reséndiz  
Tax Authority Bernardo Ortega Jiménez   Alfredo Sánchez Esquivel  
Justice Jesús Parra García   Beatriz Mojica Morga  
Public Security Joaquín Badillo Escamilla   Adolfo Torales Catalán  
Civic Protection Patricia Doroteo Calderón   Marco Tulio Sánchez Alarcón  
Citizen Participation Julieta Fernández Márquez   Angélica Espinoza García  
Human Rights Leticia Mosso Hernández   Osbaldo Ríos Manrique  
Transparency, and Anti-Corruption Esteban Albarrán Mendoza   Jessica Ivette Alejo Rayo  
Attention to Migrants Osbaldo Ríos Manrique   Patricia Doroteo Calderón  
Urban Development and Public Works Elzy Camacho Pineda   José Efrén López Cortes  
Transportation Rafael Navarrete Quezada   Yoloczin Lizbeth Domínguez Serna  
Development and Social Welfare Claudia Sierra Pérez   Alicia Elizabeth Zamora Villalva  
Health Olaguer Hernández Flores   Andrés Guevara Cárdenas  
Education, Science and Technology Masedonio Mendoza Basurto   Rafael Navarrete Quezada  
Economic Development and Work Ociel Hugar García Trujillo   Joaquín Badillo Escamilla  
Handicrafts María Flores Maldonado   Jennyfer García Lucena  
Tourism Ana Lenis Reséndiz Javier   Yanelly Hernández Martínez  
Agricultural and Fisheries Development Marco Tulio Sánchez Alarcón   Carlos Reyes Torres  
Indigenous and Afro-Mexican Peoples and Communities Marben de la Cruz Santiago   Leticia Mosso Hernández  
Gender Equality Gabriela Bernal Reséndiz   Gloria Citlali Calixto Jiménez  
Rights of Girls, Boys and Adolescents Beatriz Mojica Morga   Julieta Fernández Márquez  
Youth and Sports Angélica Espinoza García   Ana Lenis Reséndiz Javier  
Natural Resources, Sustainable Development and Climate Change Manuel Quiñonez Cortés   Nora Yanek Velázquez Martínez  
Culture Jennyfer García Lucena   Fortunato Hernández Carbajal  
Care for the Elderly Jessica Ivette Alejo Rayo   Adolfo Torales Catalán  
Care for People with Disabilities Gloria Citlali Calixto Jiménez   Jesús Parra García  
Water, Infrastructure and Hydraulic Resources Nora Yanek Velázquez Martínez   Manuel Quiñonez Cortés  
Housing Yanelly Hernández Martínez   Antonio Helguera Jiménez  
Judiciary Susana Paola Juárez Gómez   Carlos Cruz López  
Rules Ricardo Astudillo Calvo   Jacinto González Varona  
Mining Andrés Guevara Cárdenas   Susana Paola Juárez Gómez  

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Bicentenario, ed. (2016). "SE DECLARA FORMALMENTE CONSTITUIDO EL ESTADO DE GUERRERO". Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 October 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2019.
  2. ^ "MESA DIRECTIVA DEL ESTADO DE GUERRERO". 16 September 2023. Retrieved 19 September 2024.
  3. ^ Trinidad Zamacona López, ed. (2013). "Historia del Parlamentarismo en Guerrero 1850-2013" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 October 2018. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
  4. ^ "COMISIONES DE LA LXIII LEGISLATURA". Retrieved September 22, 2023.
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