Overview
- The Central de Trabajadoras y Trabajadores de la Ciudad y el Campo, which set its march for Tuesday at 5 p.m., plans to send about 500 people from four start points toward the Zócalo.
- The city’s Security Ministry (SSC) mapped the routes along Paseo de la Reforma, Avenida Juárez, Eje Central Lázaro Cárdenas and Fray Servando Teresa de Mier, with the tightest disruptions expected from 5 to 8 p.m.
- Mobility advisers urged drivers to avoid the city center, leave early or use public transit, and take Circuito Interior, Eje 1 Poniente (Cuauhtémoc) or Eje 1 Oriente (Anillo de Circunvalación) as detours.
- Organizers say the march presses for job stability and regularization, a 40‑hour workweek, an emergency wage increase, access to health services, reinstatement of dismissed workers, universal childcare and benefits, and rights for non‑salaried workers.
- Separate rallies by cannabis advocates, the 40 Días por la Vida group, former Ruta 100 workers, animal-rights activists and relatives of missing persons added daylong pressure on streets in Cuauhtémoc and other boroughs.