Telecommunications Regulatory Commission


The Telecommunications Regulatory Commission is the regulatory body responsible for regulating the telecommunications and broadcasting industries in Mexico. It was formed in 2025 as the successor to the Federal Telecommunications Institute and is part of the.

History

The Federal Telecommunications Institute, an autonomous agency, faced scrutiny over its performance during the administration of president Andrés Manuel López Obrador. While it had as many as seven commissioners, by 2024 it was left with only three as a result of new commissioners not being nominated by the president. A two-thirds majority of the Chamber of Deputies and Senate of the Republic approved in November 2024 a constitutional amendment to eliminate seven autonomous agencies, including the IFT. The functions of the IFT were transferred to a cabinet secretariat, the .
However, as implementing legislation was produced to effectuate the reform, concern grew that moving telecommunications regulation directly under the ATDT violated the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement, which required Mexico to have an independent, autonomous telecommunications regulator. As a result, the final version of the Ley en Materia de Telecomunicaciones y Radiodifusión included the creation of the Telecommunications Regulatory Commission within the ATDT, with partial independence and a collegial body of five commissioners. The new telecommunications legislation entered into force on July 17, 2025, but it specified that the CRT would only come into being once its five commissioners had been confirmed by the Senate and President Sheinbaum had selected its chair. One result was that the 2014 and 2025 telecommunications laws were both in effect for a time. Another was that the IFT entered into a lame duck status.
The IFT was legally dissolved on October 17, 2025, upon the confirmation of the CRT's commissioners and naming of its president.

Commissioners

The CRT has five commissioners, one of whom is named as the president. The original commissioners were named to staggered terms of three to seven years, with Solano having the longest term.
  • Norma Solano Rodríguez
  • Ledenika Mackensie Méndez González
  • María de las Mercedes Olivares Tresgallo
  • Tania Villa Trápala
  • Adán Salazar Garibay