Jalisco Cartel's Recruitments Tied to Deceptive Job Offers and Violence

In her first 100 days as president, Claudia Sheinbaum's administration has recorded higher rates of murder and missing persons compared to her predecessor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, although there has been an uptick in security operations, arrests, and seizures of drugs and weapons. A report from think tank México Evalúa indicates that the current violence is more severe than that faced by López Obrador, largely due to “political-criminal violence,” which involves attacks by organized crime on public officials and politicians.
While Sheinbaum has retained elements of López Obrador’s controversial "hugs, not bullets" strategy, she has shifted the focus to intelligence-led operations, credited to new security chief Omar García Harfuch. However, criticisms persist, with experts highlighting the persistence of extortion and the ineffectiveness of Mexico's justice system, where impunity rates exceed 90%. Armando Vargas of México Evalúa warns that without a comprehensive approach, Sheinbaum’s administration risks repeating the mistakes of previous administrations amid entrenched criminal control in various regions.