Agency Name: | Secretariat of the Interior |
Nativename: | Secretaría de Gobernación |
Picture Caption: | Head Office of the Interior |
Formed: | 1853 |
Preceding1: | Office for Domestic and Foreign Affairs |
Jurisdiction: | Federal government of Mexico |
Headquarters: | Abraham González 49 Juárez 06600 Juárez, Mexico City |
Chief1 Name: | Luisa María Alcalde Luján |
Chief1 Position: | Secretary |
Child1 Agency: | Federal Police (Mexico) |
Child2 Agency: | General Directorate of Radio, Television and Film |
Child3 Agency: | Center for Research and National Security |
Child4 Agency: | National Institute of Migration |
Keydocument1: | Reglamento Interior |
The Mexican Secretariat of the Interior (Spanish; Castilian: Secretaría de Gobernación|lit=Secretariat for Governance; SEGOB) is the public department concerned with the country's domestic affairs, the presenting of the president's bills to Congress, their publication in the Official Journal of the Federation, and certain issues of national security. The country's principal intelligence agency, CISEN, is directly answerable to the Secretary of the Interior. The Secretary is a member of the president's Cabinet and is, given the constitutional implications of the post, the most important cabinet member. Additionally, in case of both temporary and absolute absences of the president, the Secretary of the Interior assumes the president's executive powers provisionally. The Office is practically equivalent to Ministries of the Interior in most other countries (with the exception of the United States) and is occasionally translated to English as Ministry, Secretariat or Department of the Interior.
In 1821, after the establishment of what was then the Provisional Cabinet (Junta Gubernativa Provisional), and given public urgings to organise the country's government, regulation was produced outlining the functions of a new governmental arm, then styled the "Office for Domestic and Foreign Affairs". The new agency was answerable for managing the functioning of the government in general. The first person to take up the Directorship of the Office was José Manuel de Herrera who held the post between 1821 and 1823. Later on, it became necessary to particularise the duties of certain government agencies, which, in 1843, lead to the creation of the 'Office for Home Affairs' (also styled 'Department of the Interior'), which would later be re-styled as the 'Office for Foreign Relations and Government' in 1841 and then again in 1843 as the 'Office for Home Affairs and Policing'. The Office eventually had some of its powers separated into other ministries and, in 1853, was once again named 'Office for Home Affairs' —as it is still called up to the present day.
The Secretariat of the Interior in its modern day form is concerned principally with the good management and proper application of the policies of the Federal Government within its national borders.
It is a department of the national executive branch, whose origins date back to article 222 of the 1812 Spanish Constitution, which received royal assent on 19 March 1812. Among the Cabinet Secretaries mentioned in the constitution were those of "Governance of the Realm in the Peninsula and Adjacent Islands" and "Governance of the Realm Overseas". On 22 October 1814, the "Constitutional Declaration for the Emancipation of Mexican America", known as the Constitution of Apatzingán, made provisions for a republican form of government by way of Article 134. The Apatzingán Constitution provided for an Executive Branch known as the Supreme Government which would be equipped with an Department for Home Affairs, among other governmental departments.
This position was historically seen as being a heartbeat away from the presidency, because several Secretaries of the Interior were chosen as presidential candidates for the following term by incumbent presidents Plutarco Elías Calles, Emilio Portes Gil, Lázaro Cárdenas, Miguel Alemán Valdés, Adolfo Ruiz Cortines, Gustavo Díaz Ordaz, Luis Echeverría. Francisco Labastida, Secretary of the Interior during the latter part of the Zedillo government, was seen as Zedillo's personal favorite during the Institutional Revolutionary Party's primaries (the first the party would ever hold) and during his unsuccessful bid which saw his political undoing at the hands of PAN candidate Vicente Fox. In turn, Fox's Secretary of the Interior, Santiago Creel, ran in the National Action Party's primaries in 2006, but was defeated by Felipe Calderón.
According to Article 27 of the Organic Law of the Federal Public Administration the department is responsible for the following functions and duties:
1853–1853: Manuel Díez de Bonilla 1853–1855: Ignacio Aguilar
1855: José Guadalupe Martínez
1855: José Guadalupe Martínez
1855: José Guadalupe Martínez 1855: Francisco de P. Cendejas
1855: Francisco de P. Cendejas 1855–1857: José María Lafragua 1857: Ignacio de la Llave 1857: Jesús Terán Peredo 1857: Francisco del P. Cendejas 1857: José María Cortés y Esparza 1857: Benito Juárez García 1857–1858: José María Cortés y Esparza
1858: Hilario Elguero 1858–1859: Juan Manuel Fernández de Jáuregui
1859: Juan Manuel Fernández de Jáuregui
1859: Juan Manuel Fernández de Jáuregui
1859: Ignacio Anievas 1859: Teófilo Marín 1859: Antonio Corona 1860: José Ignacio de Anievas 1860: Isidro Díaz
1859) : José Ignacio Anievas
1864: José María González de la Vega[3] 1864–1865: José María Cortés Esparza 1865–1866: José María Esteva 1866–1867: José Salazar Ilarregui 1867: Teófilo Marín 1867: José María Iribarren
1858–1858: Manuel Ruiz 1858–1858: Melchor Ocampo 1858–1858: Santos Degollado Sánchez 1858–1858: Ignacio de la Llave 1858–1859: Melchor Ocampo 1859–1860: Ignacio de la Llave 1860–1861: Manuel Ruiz 1861–1861: José Manuel de Emparan 1861–1861: Ignacio de la Llave 1861–1861: Pedro Ogazón 1861–1861: Francisco Zarco 1861–1861: León Guzmán 1861–1861: Manuel María de Zamacona 1861–1861: Juan José de la Garza 1861–1862: Manuel Doblado 1862–1862: Jesús Terán 1862–1862: Manuel Doblado 1862–1863: Juan Antonio de la Fuente 1863–1863: Manuel Doblado 1863–1863: Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada 1867–1868: Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada 1868–1868: Ignacio L. Vallarta 1868–1869: José María Iglesias 1869–1871: Manuel Saavedra 1871–1872: José María Castillo Velasco 1872–1872: Cayetano Gómez y Pérez
1876–1876: Cayetano Gómez Pérez 1876–1876: Juan José Baz
1876–1877: Protasio Tagle 1877–1879: Trinidad Garcia Brito 1879–1880: Eduardo Pankhurst 1880–1880: Felipe Berriozábal
1880–1884: Carlos Díez Gutiérrez
1884–1895: Manuel Romero Rubio 1895–1903: Manuel González Cosío 1903–1911: Ramón Corral
1911–1911: Emilio Vázquez Gómez 1911–1911: Alberto García Granados
1911–1912: Abraham González 1912–1912: Jesús Flores Magón 1912–1913: Rafael Lorenzo Hernández
1913–1913: Victoriano Huerta
1913–1913: Alberto García Granados 1913–1913: Aureliano Urrutia 1913–1913: Manuel Garza Aldape 1913–1914: Ignacio Alcocer |
1914–1914: José María Luján
1914–1914: Eliseo Arredondo 1914–1915: Rafael Zubarán Capmany 1915–1915: Jesús Acuña 1915–1915: Adolfo de la Huerta 1917–1917: Jesús Acuña
1920–1920: Gilberto Valenzuela 1920–1920: José Inociencio Lugo
1920–1923: Plutarco Elías Calles 1923–1923: Gilberto Valenzuela 1923–1924: Enrique Colunga 1924–1924: Romeo Ortega
1924–1925: Romeo Ortega 1925: Gilberto Valenzuela 1925–1928: Adalberto Tejeda 1928: Gonzalo Vázquez Vela 1928: Emilio Portes Gil
1928–1930: Felipe Canales
1930: Emilio Portes Gil 1930–1931: Carlos Riva Palacio 1931: Octavio Mendoza González 1931: Lázaro Cárdenas del Río 1931–1932: Manuel C. Téllez 1932–1934: Juan José Ríos
1932–1934: Eduardo Vasconcelos 1934: Narciso Bassols 1934: Juan D. Cabral
1934–1935: Juan de Dios Bojórquez 1935–1936: Silvano Barba González 1936–1938: Silvestre Guerrero 1938–1940: Ignacio García Téllez
1940–1945: Miguel Alemán 1945–1946: Primo Villa Michel
1946–1948: Héctor Pérez Martínez 1948: Ernesto P. Uruchurtu 1948–1951: Adolfo Ruiz Cortines 1951–1952: Ernesto P. Uruchurtu
1952–1958: Ángel Carvajal Bernal
1958–1963: Gustavo Díaz Ordaz 1963–1964: Luis Echeverría Álvarez
1964–1969: Luis Echeverría Álvarez 1969–1970: Mario Moya Palencia
1970–1976: Mario Moya Palencia
1976–1979: Jesús Reyes Heroles 1979–1982: Enrique Olivares Santana
1982–1988: Manuel Bartlett
1988–1993: Fernando Gutiérrez Barrios 1993–1994: Patrocinio González Garrido 1994–1994: Jorge Carpizo McGregor
1994–1995: Esteban Moctezuma 1995–1998: Emilio Chuayffet 1998–1999: Francisco Labastida 1999–2000: Diódoro Carrasco Altamirano
2000–2005: Santiago Creel 2005–2006: Carlos Abascal
2006–2008: Francisco Javier Ramírez Acuña 2008: Juan Camilo Mouriño (died in office) 2008–2010: Fernando Gómez Mont 2010–2011: Francisco Blake Mora (died in office) 2011–2012: Alejandro Poiré Romero
2012–2018: Miguel Ángel Osorio Chong 2018: Alfonso Navarrete Prida
2018–2021: Olga Sánchez Cordero 2021–2023: Adán Augusto López Hernández 2023: Alejandro Encinas Rodríguez 2023–present: Luisa María Alcalde Luján |