MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Thousands of Mexican teachers protested on the streets of Mexico City yesterday against a crucial part of President Enrique Pena Nieto’s education reform, sensing that government support for it was crumbling.
On Friday, the Education Ministry said it would suspend the planned teacher evaluations opposed by militant teaching unions in Mexico, which fear it will curb their power.
The decision followed months of agitation from union members, and sparked condemnation from opposition lawmakers and supporters of the law, who said it would gut the reform. Buoyed by the retreat, 10,000 teachers and opponents of what Pena Nieto has argued is his most important piece of legislation massed on the Paseo de la Reforma, one of the capital’s main boulevards, in an effort to kill off evaluations altogether.
“The evaluations are punitive,” said Juan Carlos Lopez, 42, a primary school teacher. “It’s a justification to fire teachers on a massive scale.”
Supporters of the reform said it was urgently needed to improve flagging educational standards and root out corruption in teaching unions. Its critics argue that many poorer teachers lack the financial support to meet required standards.
Opposition to education reform has been strongest among teachers in the southwest of Mexico, where some surrounded a facility of state oil company Pemex in Oaxaca state with cargo trucks and burnt ballot papers in state capital Oaxaca City.
Some protesters have threatened to interfere with nationwide elections due to be held next Sunday, and opposition lawmakers accused the government of sacrificing the reform to protect the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI.