Escocés and Yorkino, members of two rival Masonic lodges that exercised considerable political influence in early 19th-century Mexico; the names mean Scotsman and Yorkist, respectively, after the two orders of Freemasonry, the Scottish and York rites.
The Escoceses, organized about 1806 and a primary force in overthrowing the monarchy of Agustín de Iturbide in 1823, favoured a conservative, centralist form of government. The Yorkinos, founded about 1825, led the movement for a liberal, federalist constitution. President Guadalupe Victoria (1824–28) and some of his Cabinet ministers belonged to the York Rite; his vice president, Nicolás Bravo, was grand master of the Scottish Rite. This domestic Masonic rivalry had diplomatic ramifications; the U.S. minister to Mexico (1825–29), Joel Poinsett, espoused the York Rite; his inept interference in Mexican politics caused him to be turned out of the country without the trade pact he had been sent to secure. (Mexicans have sometimes used the term poinsettismo to denote North American interference in their nation’s affairs.) The British minister, H.G. Ward, an adherent of the Scottish Rite, through his politic and lavish cultivation of men of influence, successfully concluded a trade agreement in 1827. A controversy over the national debt induced Bravo, supported by the Escoceses, to revolt against Victoria’s Yorkino-dominated government in 1828; failure brought exile to several Escoceses and discredit to their lodge.
In the presidential elections of 1828, the Yorkinos themselves were divided over a candidate. They finally settled on Vicente Guerrero, who was defeated by Manuel Gómez Pedraza, the leader of a faction called the Impartials, which refused to support either lodge. Guerrero, however, was finally installed by Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna’s army. By this time the Yorkinos also had lost their political influence.