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Events in the year 1989 in Mexico.
Incumbents
Federal government
- President: Carlos Salinas de Gortari
 - Interior Secretary (SEGOB): Fernando Gutiérrez Barrios
 - Secretary of Foreign Affairs (SRE): Fernando Solana
 - Communications Secretary (SCT): Andrés Caso Lombardo
 - Education Secretary (SEP): Manuel Bartlett
 - Secretary of Defense (SEDENA): Antonio Riviello Bazán
 - Secretary of Navy: Luis Carlos Ruano Angulo
 - Secretary of Labor and Social Welfare: Arsenio Farell Cubillas
 - Secretary of Welfare: Patricio Chirinos Calero
 - Secretary of Public Education: Manuel Bartlett Díaz
 - Tourism Secretary (SECTUR): Carlos Hank González
 - Secretary of the Environment (SEMARNAT): María de los Angeles Moreno
 - Secretary of Health (SALUD): Jesús Kumate Rodríguez
 
Supreme Court
- President of the Supreme Court: Carlos del Río Rodríguez
 
Governors
- Aguascalientes: Miguel Ángel Barberena Vega, (Institutional Revolutionary Party, PRI)
 - Baja California
- Xicoténcatl Leyva Mortera (PRI), until January 5
 - Oscar Baylón Chacón, (PRI), January 6 to October 31.[1]
 - Ernesto Ruffo Appel, National Action Party (PAN), starting November 1. Ruffo Appel was the first governor who was not a member of PRI since 1929.[2]
 
 - Baja California Sur:
 - Campeche: Miguel Ángel Barberena Vega
 - Chiapas: Víctor Manuel Liceaga Ruibal
 - Chihuahua: Francisco Barrio
 - Coahuila: Eliseo Mendoza Berrueto
 - Colima: Elías Zamora Verduzco
 - Durango: Armando del Castillo Franco
 - Guanajuato: Rafael Corrales Ayala
 - Guerrero: José Francisco Ruiz Massieu
 - Hidalgo: Adolfo Lugo Verduzco
 - Jalisco: Francisco Rodríguez Gómez/Guillermo Cosío Vidaurri
 - State of Mexico: Mario Ramón Beteta/Ignacio Pichardo Pagaza
 - Michoacán: Genovevo Figueroa Zamudio
 - Morelos: Antonio Riva Palacio (PRI).[3]
 - Nayarit: Celso Humberto Delgado Ramírez
 - Nuevo León: Jorge Treviño
 - Oaxaca: Heladio Ramírez López
 - Puebla: Mariano Piña Olaya
 - Querétaro: Mariano Palacios Alcocer
 - Quintana Roo: Miguel Borge Martín
 - San Luis Potosí: no data
 - Sinaloa: Francisco Labastida
 - Sonora: Rodolfo Félix Valdés
 - Tabasco: José María Peralta López
 - Tamaulipas: Américo Villarreal Guerra
 - Tlaxcala: Beatriz Paredes Rangel
 - Veracruz: Dante Delgado Rannauro
 - Yucatán: Víctor Manzanilla Schaffer
 - Zacatecas: Genaro Borrego Estrada
 - Regent of Mexico City: Manuel Camacho Solís[4]
 
Events
- Music group Café Tacuba is founded.
 - Newspaper El Economista is founded.
 - The Guadalajara light rail system begins operating.
 - The Santa Teresa la Antigua Alternative Art Center opens its doors.
 - February 13: Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional (México) and the National Human Rights Commission (Mexico) are founded.
 - March 2: FONCA, (Fondo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes) is founded.
 - March 3: Miss Latin America 1989 held in Hermosillo, Sonora.
 - May 5: The Party of the Democratic Revolution is founded.
 - May 23: Miss Universe 1989 held in Cancún, Quintana Roo.
 - August 10: The San Rafael River train disaster
 - August 25–29: Hurricane Kiko
 - October 19: The Autonomous University of Campeche is established.
 
Awards
- Belisario Domínguez Medal of Honor – Raúl Castellano Jiménez
 
Births
- January 10: Zuria Vega, actress and singer
 - June 7: Sofía Sisniega, actress
 - September 14: Miriam Zetter, ten-pin bowler[5]
 
Deaths
- August 7 — Leopoldo Sánchez Celis, Governor of Sinaloa 1963–1968 (b. 1916)
 - October 30 — Pedro Vargas, Mexican singer and actor (b. 1906)
 
Film
Sport
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1989 in Mexico.
References
- ↑ "Fallece Óscar Baylón, último gobernador del PRI en el Estado". ELIMPARCIAL.COM | Noticias de Tijuana, México (in European Spanish). 11 August 2008. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
 - ↑ "¿Quién es Ernesto Ruffo Appel? - Historia". culturacolectiva.com (in Spanish). 27 March 2019. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
 - ↑ Monroy, David (July 15, 2014). "Muere Antonio Riva Palacio, ex gobernador de Morelos". www.milenio.com (in Spanish). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
 - ↑ "¿Los conociste?, ¿los recuerdas? Ellos fueron los regentes y jefes de Gobierno CDMX". Sopitas.com (in Spanish). 5 December 2018. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
 - ↑ "Bowling | Athlete Profile: ZETTER VELAZCO Miram Aseret - Pan American Games Lima 2019". wrsd.lima2019.pe. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
 
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