On Monday, October 6, 2025, the municipality of Yanga, Veracruz was shook by a tragic event: Jessica Luna Aguilera, a former mayoral candidate for the Labor Party (PT), was assassinated while driving to pick up her daughter from school.
This crime is not just another headline. It is a stark reminder of how violence is eroding the space for democratic participation in many parts of Mexico—particularly at the local level.
According to multiple English-language reports, Luna Aguilera was traveling in her vehicle in the community of Potrero Nuevo, in the municipality of Atoyac, when armed individuals intercepted her van and opened fire.
Her vehicle lost control and crashed into a wall near a school, and she succumbed to her injuries at the scene. At the time, she was en route to pick up her daughter, which intensifies the tragedy of the case.
The assailants fled without being apprehended, and authorities quickly cordoned off the area. The state prosecutor’s office in Veracruz has opened an investigation into the crime.
Political violence in the region: a pattern emerges
This is not an isolated incident. In recent months, Veracruz has witnessed more attacks against candidates and public officials. For example, earlier in the current election cycle, Yesenia Lara Gutiérrez, a mayoral candidate from the Morena party, was killed in an armed assault while campaigning.
Analyses of political assassinations in Mexico suggest that many of these killings are tied to organized crime seeking to control local governments or retaliate against state actions.
A recent study argues that these acts are part of a broader strategy by criminal groups to influence elections, gain “rent-seeking” control of municipal offices, and disrupt governmental efforts in their territories.
The questions that remain
- Who ordered and carried out this attack? Are there political or criminal motives behind it?
- Was Jessica’s candidacy seen as a threat to some entrenched local interests?
- Why is protection for political actors so uneven, especially in volatile regions?
- Will the authorities follow through with transparency and accountability, or will this case fade into impunity?
This tragedy must be more than a news item—it must become a catalyst for change. The killing of Jessica Luna Aguilera lays bare a systemic failure: the inability of institutions to protect those who enter public life, especially women, and the silent, corrosive effect that fear has on democracy.
Condemnation and expressions of sorrow are not enough. We demand prompt, transparent, and thorough investigations, full accountability for perpetrators and instigators, and policy reforms to safeguard political participation in Mexico’s most vulnerable regions.
For the Hispanic community—frequently positioned on the frontlines of democracy’s promise—silence is not an option. We must perpetuate memory, demand justice, and affirm that the right to engage civically must never be a death sentence. Democracy is strongest when its citizens feel safe to speak, to run, and to vote.
About The Author
Read the full article here