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WSWS : News
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America : Mexico
Ruling party defeated in Mexican elections
By Patrick Martin
4 July 2000
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The long-ruling Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI)
suffered a massive defeat in the July 2 national elections in
Mexico, losing the presidency for the first time in its history
and suffering other losses in elections for Congress, for mayor
of Mexico City and for two state governorships.
Vicente Fox of the right-wing Partido Accion National (PAN)
won a clear-cut victory in the presidential election, taking 44
percent of the vote, compared to 34 percent for Francisco Labastida
of the PRI and 16 percent for Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, candidate of
the populist Partido Revolucionario Democratico (PRD). Fox carried
22 of Mexico's 32 states, compared to 9 for Labastida and only
one for Cardenas, his home state of Michoacan.
Within hours of the close of the polls President Ernesto Zedillo
went on national television to confirm what exit polls were already
making clear, that Fox had won the presidency. He pledged that
he would transfer power to his successor on December 1, as provided
by Mexico's constitution. Labastida followed with the first-ever
concession speech by a PRI presidential candidate, acknowledging
his party's defeat and congratulating Fox.
Mexico now faces an extended period of political instability,
which will not end when Fox takes office. The PAN president will
face a legislature in which no party controls a majority. Exact
figures on House and Senate seats are not yet available, but preliminary
vote totals showed a considerably closer race in the legislature
than for the presidency, with 38 percent of votes cast for the
PAN, 36 percent for the PRI and 19 percent for the PRD. The PAN
led in 16 states, the PRI in 14 states, and the PRD in two.
Fox will not control the capital, Mexico City, as the PRD candidate,
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, won election as governor of the Distrito
Federal. Obrador received 39 percent of the vote and edged out
the PAN candidate, Santiago Creel, who received 34 percent. Jesus
Silva Herzog, the candidate of Mexico's ruling party, came in
a poor third with 22 percent.
Although the PAN won the two state governorships which were
up for a vote, in the small states of Morelos and Guanajuato,
more than half the state governments remain under the control
of the PRI. More importantly, the entire government bureaucracy,
local, state and national, owes its allegiance to the PRI. Civil
servants were effectively compelled to join the PRI and make financial
contributions as a condition of their jobs, and the PRI also controls
the major civil service trade unions.
The PRI's defeat marks an end to 71 years of continuous rule
by the party founded in 1929 by the generals who emerged as the
key power brokers at the end of the Mexican Revolution. While
the PRI long ago abandoned its nationalist program of land redistribution,
economic independence and limited concessions to the working class,
its defeat is not the product of a mass movement from below.
On the contrary, popular anger over corruption, mismanagement
and endemic poverty has been diverted behind a right-wing big
business party that will seek to intensify, rather than reverse,
the attacks on working people carried out by the PRI. Fox, a former
executive for Coca Cola, has pledged better relations with Wall
Street and further privatization and deregulation of the Mexican
economy.
Fox's election was hailed in the American media as a triumph
for democracy in Mexico. In the weeks leading up the vote there
were repeated warnings that international public opinioni.e.,
Washington and the IMFwould not tolerate any attempt by
the PRI to rig the vote results.
This is in sharp contrast to 1988, when the PRI faced its first
significant challenge for power. In that campaign Cardenas broke
with the PRI and ran for president on the basis of a populist
program, presenting himself as the advocate of the workers and
the rural poor. The PRI blatantly stole the election, but there
was no outcry from the US government, which had no desire to see
the PRI replaced by a more radical regime.
Fox will preside over a country riven by social tensions. According
to government figures released last month, the gulf between the
country's rich and poor is wider than ever. Between 1996 and 1998,
the share of the national income earned by the richest tenth of
households rose from 36.6 percent to 38.1 percent. Meanwhile,
the poorest 60 percent of households saw their share fall, from
26.9 percent to 25.5 percent. According to the Inter-American
Development Bank, during the 1990s inequality in wages increased
more in Mexico than in any other Latin American country.
Severe regional differences exist between the northern half
of the country, where most foreign investment has been concentrated,
and the much poorer southern states. These disparities were reflected
in the presidential vote. Fox carried 14 out of 17 states in northern
Mexico, where the PAN has historically been centered and where
the PRD was barely a factor. In central Mexico, around the capital
city, and in the southern states, the vote was a closely contested
three-way race, with PAN leading in eight states, the PRI in six.
Cardenas of the PRD led in only one, but finished second in several
others, including Mexico City. Fox won an outright majority in
11 northern states, but did not do so in a single southern or
central state.
See Also:
Presidential election marks turning point
for Mexico
[1 July 2000]
Globalization and the
crisis of the PRI
Mexico's ruling party fragmenting
[8 April 1999]
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