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Truckers, Farmers Blockade Mexico’s Highways, Disrupting Holiday Traffic

April 6, 2026 by MxTrib Staff

Truckers in Mexico declare a massive blockade for Easter Monday 2026.

Hundreds of truckers and farm workers fanned out across Mexico early Monday morning, setting up blockades on major highways in at least 20 states to demand better security on the roads and fairer conditions for agricultural producers — and putting a difficult cap on the Semana Santa holiday weekend for thousands of returning vacationers.

The action was organized by two national groups: ANTAC, the National Association of Transporters, and the FNRCM, the National Front for the Rescue of the Mexican Countryside. Both confirmed the protest in a joint statement Sunday, saying the federal government had failed to deliver meaningful solutions after talks with a senior aide to President Claudia Sheinbaum on April 1 produced no agreements.

Blockades began intensifying at around 7 a.m. and targeted high-traffic corridors, including the Mexico City–Querétaro, Mexico City–Puebla, and Mexico City–Guadalajara autopistas, as well as access roads into Nuevo Laredo near the U.S. border. Customs facilities and border crossings were also expected to be affected.

ANTAC leader David Estévez Gamboa had specifically chosen Easter Monday to minimize disruption to holiday travelers. “We want people to be able to go on vacation, we’re not irresponsible,” he said in a video message before the protest. “But after, on April 6, we have the need to protest.” Despite that gesture, the timing still caught tens of thousands of people heading home after the school break.

The action is not the first of its kind. A similar mega-blockade in November 2025 shut down highways across more than half of Mexico’s states for several days, costing an estimated MX$3 billion to MX$6 billion (roughly US$163 million to US$327 million) in losses according to business groups. That standoff ended after marathon negotiations produced preliminary agreements — agreements that protesters now say the government has not kept.

Truckers cite a dangerous working environment as the core of their grievance. ANTAC reports between 54 and 70 cargo robberies per day on Mexican highways, a figure the federal government disputes. Protesters also accuse state, municipal, and even National Guard officers of participating in extortion at roadside checkpoints. A Yucatán Magazine report on the Mérida-Cancún highway showed how truckers in the Peninsula have faced similar pressures for years, with rising tolls and security gaps squeezing commercial drivers on one of the country’s most expensive road corridors.

Farmers come to the protest with their own list of grievances: unfair grain prices, diesel costs, potholed roads, what they describe as predatory lending, and competition from subsidized agricultural imports. The FNRCM also wants the government to scrap what it considers a punishing tax on diesel fuel.

The government’s response has been firm. Mexico’s Interior Ministry, known as Segob and headed by Rosa Icela Rodríguez Velázquez, issued a statement Sunday night saying flatly that there was “no reason” for the protest. The ministry argued that it had already dispensed MX$3.41 billion (about US$185 million) in direct payments to more than 40,000 farmers to compensate for grain price shortfalls, and that dialogue channels with both sectors remain open. In the case of Sinaloa specifically, Segob said an agreement benefiting producers in the upcoming harvest had been reached.

“The majority of organizations have decided not to mobilize,” the ministry’s statement read. “Without any reason, there are some that maintain their position despite the fact that there are no grounds” for the action.

President Sheinbaum, speaking at her morning press conference Tuesday following November’s blockade, pointed to government data showing a 54% drop in violent truck robberies since 2018 — an average of 14 per day in 2025, down from more than 30 per day under the previous administration. Protesters counter that underreporting is widespread and the actual numbers remain far higher.

For travelers on Mexican highways today, officials recommend anticipating significant delays and seeking alternate routes where possible.

More details on the megabloqueo are available from Excélsior.

At a Glance

  • Who is protesting: ANTAC (National Association of Transporters) and FNRCM (National Front for the Rescue of the Mexican Countryside)
  • When: Monday, April 6, 2026, starting at 7 a.m.
  • Where: 20-plus states; key routes include Mexico City–Querétaro, Mexico City–Puebla, and Mexico City–Guadalajara autopistas, plus border access roads near Nuevo Laredo
  • Key demands (truckers): Permanent National Guard presence on high-crime routes; end to extortion; access to IMSS Bienestar health services; development bank loans for owner-operators
  • Key demands (farmers): Fair grain prices; diesel tax relief; repair of potholes; halt to unfair imports; elimination of predatory loan structures
  • Government position: Segob says no grounds exist for the protest; cites MX$3.41 billion in direct farm payments and active dialogue with industry groups
  • Advisories: Travelers should plan for delays and consider alternate routes

Source: Excélsior

Filed Under: News

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