Ariadna Montiel, a national leader for the Morena party, said the process for selecting state coordinators across 17 Mexican entities is underway [1].

This selection process is critical for the party to establish leadership for the defense of the "4T" movement. By finalizing these roles, Morena ensures it meets the candidate limits established in its strategic alliance with the Labor Party (PT) and the Green Party (Partido Verde) [2].

Montiel said the process involves six aspirants for each of the 17 states [1]. The coordinators will be responsible for leading the party's efforts within their respective jurisdictions. This structured approach is designed to maintain internal order while adhering to the agreements made with allied political parties [2].

The movement seeks to solidify its organizational structure ahead of upcoming political challenges. The selection of these coordinators is a primary step in ensuring the alliance's goals are executed at the local level. The party's internal framework dictates how these six candidates per state are evaluated before a final coordinator is chosen [1].

Separate from the coordinator selection, reports indicate that Félix Delgado has requested a license, though the primary focus of the current party activity remains the state-level organizational push [1].

The coordination effort is intended to streamline the party's influence across the federation. By limiting the number of aspirants to six per entity, Morena aims to manage competition while ensuring a diverse pool of potential leaders [1]. This strategy allows the party to align its regional goals with the national agenda of the 4T movement [2].

six aspirants per state in 17 entities

The structured selection of state coordinators indicates Morena's intent to tighten central control over its regional operations. By coordinating closely with the PT and Green Party, the party is prioritizing alliance stability over open competition, ensuring that its leadership pipeline is aligned with the broader goals of the Fourth Transformation (4T) political project.