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Today’s verdict: Sunday is decision day twice over — Mexico’s teachers meet to lock in a World Cup-week battle plan that now names the airport and the stadium, Peru chooses a president on a knife-edge, and São Paulo throws the biggest Pride parade on earth.
01
Mexico City — the union sets its plan today. After rejecting the government’s first pension offer, the teachers’ national assembly meets this Sunday to approve their official response and next moves. Leaders have floated blockades at the airport and the stadium, with reinforcements arriving over the weekend, four days before kickoff.
02
Peru — 27.3 million people vote. Polls run 7am to 5pm, the exit-poll flash lands at 5pm, and the first official count is due after 11pm. Keiko Fujimori faces Roberto Sánchez in a race tight enough that the final result could take days.
03
São Paulo Pride turns 30. Fourteen trios and more than 130 acts — Pabllo Vittar, Gloria Groove, Urias, Melody — roll down Avenida Paulista from 10am under the theme “the street calls, the ballot confirms.”
What changed since yesterdayMexico moved from strike-extended to the day the union formalizes its World Cup-week tactics. Peru moved from a silent dry-law Saturday to ballots in the box, with a result expected tonight. Rio’s Saturday double bill — Global Citizen Live and the Maracanã samba summit — is now in the rear-view mirror.
Good morning — this is the rare Sunday where two of the region’s biggest stories resolve before bedtime. Your LatAm expat nomad daily guide tracks a teachers’ assembly that could reshape World Cup week, a presidential count that may run late, and a Pride parade that swallows an avenue.
The hard news peaks in Mexico City and Lima today, while São Paulo turns the page to celebration.
Peru votes for president today; the result is expected late tonight. (Lima’s Costa Verde coastline.)Key Points
- Today the teachers decide the next move. Sunday’s national assembly approves the union’s official answer to the government and sets World Cup-week tactics, with airport and stadium blockades on the table.
- Peru votes today. 27.3 million people choose between Keiko Fujimori and Roberto Sánchez; the boca-de-urna flash comes at 5pm and the first official numbers after 11pm.
- São Paulo Pride hits 30 today. Fourteen trios roll down Avenida Paulista from 10am, on the odd-numbered side this year because of roadworks.
- Medellín lines up a milestone Monday. The Tango Festival opens its 20th edition just as Colombia’s first June holiday weekend begins.
- The dollar firmed across the region. At Friday’s close it gained most on the real, the sol and the Chilean peso; markets reopen Monday.
- Uruguay’s tax clock is ticking. The 12 percent foreign-income tax starts collecting next month, so the holiday-or-tax choice is now a this-week decision.
00Status Changes Since Saturday
| CDMX teachers vs World Cup | Strike extended; solidarity forum at union HQ | National assembly votes the official response; airport and stadium blockades on the agenda; reinforcements arriving | Possible airport or stadium actions; kickoff Jun 11 |
| Peru runoff | Dry law in force; campaigning over | 27.3M vote; polls 7am–5pm; flash at 5pm; first official count after 11pm | Result tonight or later on a tight count; handover Jul 28 |
| São Paulo Pride | Route and line-up confirmed | 30th edition rolls down Avenida Paulista from 10am | Festas juninas ramp from Jun 13 |
| Medellín events | Long-weekend build-up | Los Panchos tonight; Corpus Christi holiday opens Monday | Tango Festival’s 20th edition opens Jun 8; WC debut Jun 17 |
| Riviera sargassum | Record season; ~half of 140 beaches on red alert | 120,000–130,000 t projected for 2026 (vs ~95,000 in 2025); MX$40M (US$2M) for cleanup; hotels −40% | June peak influx; World Cup visitors |
| Mérida flooding | Easing — cleanup, classes resumed | Recovery ongoing — DIF Yucatán still aiding southern settlements (Pueblo Unido, La Escondida) | Hurricane season just opened |
| Uruguay 12% tax | Weeks to first collection | Holiday-or-tax election still open | Banks start withholding in July |
01Visas & Residency
| Mexico | The teachers’ assembly meets today to approve its official answer after rejecting the government’s first pension offer — a route to scrap the USICAMM career body, a stronger state fund and a new public pension insurer — as short of repealing the 2007 pension law. Airport and stadium blockades are on the agenda for World Cup week. | The Centro–Reforma disruption stays; expat districts are unaffected, but build real airport buffer time into any World Cup-week travel. |
| Peru | Voting runs 7am to 5pm and the nationwide dry law holds until 8am Monday; foreign residents without a Peruvian ID neither vote nor face the no-vote fine. | Keep the day low-key, skip the centre, and expect noise either way once the flash count lands. |
| Colombia | The nomad-visa bar holds at three times the minimum wage — 5,252,715 pesos (about US$1,400), shown every month with no averaging; about 58% of last year’s applications were approved. | Salaried remote workers sail through; freelancers should paper their income trail carefully. |
| Uruguay | The 12% foreign-income tax starts collecting in July, with banks acting as withholding agents; the multi-year tax holiday is still electable instead. | If you are becoming a tax resident this year, make the holiday-or-tax call this month, not in August. |
| Costa Rica | The new two-year residency with full work rights for Cubans, Nicaraguans, Venezuelans and Colombians in asylum limbo is confirmed for a September 1 opening, with fees from about US$105. | A genuine regional precedent — and a lifeline for thousands stuck for years. |
| Chile | The Plan Retorno portal is still not live, and its 180-day window only starts at launch; officials warn the real process is free and online-only. | Documented expats have nothing to do; anyone selling “application help” is selling air. |
02Cost of Living & Money
Currency markets are shut for the weekend, so these are Friday’s closing levels. The dollar firmed against the whole region, hardest against the real, the sol and the Chilean peso.
| Brazilian real | 5.17 | +2.1% | your dollar goes furthest here this week |
| Mexican peso | 17.50 | +0.2% | steady through the protest noise |
| Argentine peso | 1,441 | +0.2% | still firm — the cheap-dollar era stays over |
| Colombian peso | 3,594 | +0.5% | calm into the June 21 runoff |
| Chilean peso | 912.70 | +2.0% | imported gear just got a touch cheaper |
| Peruvian sol | 3.47 | +2.0% | softening as the country votes |
| Uruguayan peso | 40.26 | +1.1% | the priciest city, a little less so |
And because the weekend is apartment-hunting time, here is the rent check across all 13 hubs — live from our city data, a furnished one-bedroom in the neighbourhoods expats actually pick.
| Mexico City | US$800–1,500 (Roma Norte) | US$1,800–3,500 |
| Playa del Carmen | US$900–1,400 near the beach | US$1,700–3,600 |
| Mérida | US$500–800, bills often in | US$1,100–1,500 |
| Oaxaca | US$400–750 | US$1,600–2,400 |
| Medellín | US$500–1,200 (El Poblado) | US$1,200–1,800 |
| Bogotá | US$550–1,300 furnished | US$1,200–2,850 |
| Buenos Aires | US$800–1,300 (Palermo) | US$1,500–2,000 |
| São Paulo | US$950–1,900, condo fees in | US$1,800–2,500 |
| Rio de Janeiro | US$690–1,190 (Botafogo) | about US$2,000 |
| Florianópolis | US$700–1,400 | US$1,250–2,000 |
| Lima | US$600–900 (Barranco) | US$1,300–1,600 |
| Santiago | US$550–900 (Providencia) | US$1,200–2,000 |
| Montevideo | US$600–1,000 (Pocitos) | US$1,500–2,200 |
03What’s On
Today (Sunday). São Paulo Pride turns 30 and rolls down Avenida Paulista from 10am, on the odd-numbered side this year because of roadworks — fourteen trios and more than 130 acts, from Pabllo Vittar and Gloria Groove to Urias and Melody.
Montevideo answers softly with Jorge Drexler at the Antel Arena, and Medellín gets the boleros of Los Panchos (from 114,500 pesos, about US$32). Buenos Aires winds down its Yerba Mate World Championship and Baroque Music Festival.
Looking to Monday. Medellín opens the Tango Festival’s 20th edition as Colombia takes its first June holiday, and Pulp plays Santiago’s Movistar Arena.
04Art & Culture
The opening that matters this week is “Janis” at São Paulo’s MIS — more than 300 original Janis Joplin items, the first time in Brazil, through July 26. Entry is 60 reais (about US$12), free on Tuesdays.
In Rio the World Press Photo show at Correios runs to June 28, while in Mexico City the National Art Museum stays shut behind the protest lines. Buenos Aires opens Arte Pequeño Formato from June 10.
05Food & Coffee
Circle June 18: Calesita 2026, Buenos Aires’ one-night crawl where chefs from seven countries take over porteño kitchens. Entry is free, plates run 20,000 to 35,000 pesos (US$14 to US$24).
Later this month São Paulo lines up both Taste São Paulo and its Coffee Festival, and Montevideo runs an international alfajor fair this weekend. Medellín’s Boro, from chef Jaime Rodríguez, is the buzzed new table.
06Community & Safety
Mexico City. The camp holds the Centro–Reforma corridor into a second week, and more teachers are arriving for World Cup week. Roma, Condesa and Polanco carry on as normal; the emergency number is 911 and the tap water is not safe to drink.
Lima. Expect a hushed, dry voting day, then crowds and reaction from tonight. Use ride apps, skip the centre, and keep Peru’s police number — 105 — handy; tap water here is not drinkable either.
Newcomer fact of the day. Tap water is genuinely drinkable in Buenos Aires, Santiago and Montevideo — and genuinely not in Mexico, Lima or most of Brazil. Knowing which list you live on saves a rough first week.
07What to Watch — June 7–13
Sun Jun 7Peru votes (flash 5pm, first official count after 11pm) · the teachers’ national assembly sets the World Cup-week plan · São Paulo Pride turns 30 · Drexler in Montevideo · Los Panchos in Medellín.
Mon Jun 8Peru result and reactions · Medellín opens the Tango Festival’s 20th edition · Colombia’s first June holiday Monday · Pulp in Santiago.
Thu Jun 11World Cup kicks off at the Estadio Ciudad de México. The Zócalo Fan Fest opens — with or without the camp next door.
Jun 13–17Arena Copacabana opens Jun 13 · Colombia’s World Cup debut vs Uzbekistan Jun 17 at the same Mexico City stadium.
Jun 18–21Calesita in Buenos Aires Jun 18 · CDMX rental-registry deadline Jun 20 · Colombia’s local runoff Jun 21.
Frequently Asked Questions
When will we know who won Peru’s election?
The exit-poll flash (boca de urna) is expected at 5pm when polls close, a civil-society quick count around 8pm, and the first official ONPE count after 11pm. Because Peruvian races are often razor-thin and rural and overseas ballots take time, the definitive result can take several days.
Does Peru’s dry law still affect me today?
Yes — alcohol sales stop for everyone until 8am Monday, restaurants and bars included. Only sellers face the fine; foreign residents without a Peruvian ID neither vote nor get penalised.
Will the teachers’ strike disrupt World Cup travel?
The June 11 opener remains on, but Sunday’s assembly decides the union’s next moves and leaders have floated blockades at the airport and the stadium. Build in extra airport time during World Cup week and check for protest filters on the Centro–Reforma corridor.
What do I need to know to enjoy São Paulo Pride?
The parade gathers on Avenida Paulista from 10am and runs on the odd-numbered side this year due to roadworks; entry is free. Bring water, sunscreen and patience, and spread onto Rua Haddock Lobo or Bela Cintra to avoid the densest crush.
Is Mexico City safe to visit right now?
The expat districts — Roma, Condesa, Polanco — are unaffected by the protest. The disruption sits in the Centro–Reforma corridor, where the camp and the police filters are.


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