Live Blog

Honduras fully renews its Supreme Court after month-long negotiation

The Congress of Honduras has appointed 15 justices to the country’s Supreme Court, following a month-long sequence of failed attempts to reach a settlement on the matter.

The court will now have six judges backed by President Xiomara Castro’s progressive Libre Party, down from the ruling coalition’s original proposal of nominating eight out of 15 members. The agreement also gave five seats to the opposition National Party (down from a controlling stake of eight) and four to the Liberal Party.

The court will also have a female majority, with eight women justices and seven men. Additionally, an indigenous Garífuna judge was appointed to one of the seats in an unprecedented move, representing the third-largest ethnic minority in Honduras.

The new members will serve until 2030. President Castro congratulated lawmakers for electing a “multiparty and multicultural” court that has “a vision of gender and transparency.” Rebeca Raquel Obando was appointed as the new chief justice.

https://twitter.com/XiomaraCastroZ/status/1626517417420619776?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

The latest events were celebrated by the U.S., with ambassador Laura Dogu speaking on Friday from capital Tegucigalpa. “We recognize the historical significance of the selection of the first Garífuna representative at the court and the selection of a majority of women. We hope to work with this new court to benefit the Honduran people,” Ms. Dogu said.

Lucas Berti

Lucas Berti covers international affairs — specialized in Latin American politics and markets. He has been published by Opera Mundi, Revista VIP, and The Intercept Brasil, among others.

Recent Posts

Market Roundup: Businesses’ default level stabilizes. What does it mean?

This week, the Central Bank stepped the brakes of monetary easing by opting for a…

15 hours ago

Virtually all Brazilians link current floods to climate change

Additionally, a whopping 96 percent of Brazilians believe extreme weather events are becoming more intense

1 day ago

Chile’s far-right wants ‘Texas-like wall’ on Bolivian border

José Antonio Kast, a former Chilean congressman, is the most influential and well-known of the…

2 days ago

Sports minister wants Brazilian league to halt amid floods

The chances of the Brazilian Football Confederation imposing a blanket suspension, however, are slim —…

2 days ago

Ride-hailing app bill still pleases no one

A House public hearing on Wednesday showed that the government-sponsored bill proposing new labor protections…

2 days ago

How you can help the Rio Grande do Sul flood victims

Rescue efforts are ongoing in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil’s southernmost state, after floods and…

2 days ago