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Near-tie election deepens Mexicos crisis
By Rafael Azul
6 July 2006
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No clear winner has emerged from the July 2 presidential election
in Mexico. Officials of Mexicos Federal Electoral Institute
(IFE) refused to declare a victor until all ballots are counted
this week. A virtual tie between the leading candidates, Felipe
Calderón and Andrés Lopez Obrador, mirrors the countrys
social and geographic polarization, which have reached crisis
proportions. This weeks election results can only serve
to push Mexico closer to a social explosion.
On Monday, preliminary results seemed to give the victory by
a small margin to the candidate of the National Action Party (PAN),
Felipe Calderón. He had 14,027,214 votes, or 36.38 percent,
ahead of Andrés Lopez Obrador, candidate of the Party of
the Democratic Revolution (PRD), who had 13,624,506 votes, or
35.34 percent of the total. Roberto Madrazo of the Institutional
Revolutionary Party (PRI) received 21.57 percent of the vote.
Two other parties, Nueva Alianza (a split-off from the PRI) and
the Democratic-Peasant Alternative (ADC) plus independent candidates
received about 4.5 percent of the vote.
Lopez Obrador challenged the results, however, claiming that
some three million votes had not been counted, based on the difference
between the reported number of voters and the number of votes
counted for president. On Wednesday, it was announced that indeed
there were 2.5 million votes, from 11,184 precincts, that had
purposely not been counted on the grounds that they were too
inconsistent to be included in the preliminary count. When
those votes are included, preliminary results reduced the margin
between both candidates to 0.64 percent, some 250,000 votes. By
late in the day, the results appeared to have handed the lead
to Lopez Obrador, by fully two percentage points.
The accusations of fraud do not stop there. La Jornada,
a Mexico City daily, charged authorities with having dumped ballots
in a city landfill and compared it to similar events that occurred
in July 1988 whenas is now widely acknowledgedthe
PRI fraudulently engineered a victory for its candidate Carlos
Salinas over the PRDs Cuahutemco Cárdenas. The ten
ballot boxes belonged to four different precincts, three that
voted for Lopez Obrador, one that voted for Calderón.
In this election, the PRI, which ruled the country for more
than 70 years before losing power in 2000, suffered a defeat of
historic significance. A stunned Madrazo addressed the press on
July 4, amidst reports that PRI leaders contacted the PAN to negotiate
an alliance between the two political parties.
The PRI, founded in December 1928 by General Plutarco Elías
Calles, from the beginning was organized as a corporatist structure
that ruled on behalf of the Mexican bourgeoisie, while regulating
its excesses managing Mexicos industrialization. The unraveling
of this corporatist system, a result of the increasing social
polarization and the breakdown the national economy under the
impact of capitalist globalization beginning in the mid 1980s,
led to the loss of the presidency in 2000.
Unreconciled to this loss of power, the Madrazo and the PRI
had made no secret that they intended to win the presidency this
electoral season. Now, however, for the first time in its history,
the PRI has lost its congressional majority.
No one party will have a majority in the legislature. The PAN
will control the largest block of representatives and senators
in Congress (199 and 41). The PRI will have 122 and 29 seats in
the respective houses of the legislature. The PRD and its coalition
partner, the Workers Party (PT) will have 26 Senators and 166
representatives.
Both the apparent vote fraud and the electoral impasse itself
reflect a nation that is split in two, geographically and along
class lines. A comparison of two mapsrepresenting how each
of Mexicos 31 states voted in 2000 and 2006would best
illustrate the collapse of the PRI. In 2000, 10 out of Mexicos
31 states voted for the PRI; 18 voted for the PAN; 3 plus the
Federal District (Mexico City) voted for the PRD. By contrast,
last Sundays results show 18 states for PAN, 13 plus the
Federal District for the PRD and none for the PRI. The PRDs
Lopez Obrador was victorious in 10 out of the 15 southernmost
states. Calderóns PAN won all six states that share
a border with the United States, plus 9 out of the 12 central
states.
The geographic division reflects real differences between the
more industrialized north and the impoverished, agricultural south.
The north has been the main focus of the free trade agreement
with the US and Canada and of direct investment by transnational
corporations that have integrated Mexicos northern factories
with American manufacturing. The less industrialized and less
productive south is dominated by grinding poverty and threatened
by US agricultural exports.
The Mexican working class, however, has failed to benefit from
Mexicos integration into the global market. Condemned to
stagnating wages, poor benefits, and dangerous working conditions;
living in substandard housing and enduring high levels of unemployment,
many workers undoubtedly look toward Lopez Obrador as a solution
to their plight.
Ongoing struggles, protests and strikes by miners, utility
workers, oil workers and public employees threaten the ability
of Mexicos elite to rule. Mexico has been called the Latin
American champion of social inequality. It stands
out in a region characterized by some of the highest levels of
inequality in income and wealth. Nearly 40 percent of Mexicos
107 million inhabitants live below the poverty line. Alongside
them there live some of the richest men in the Americas. By one
estimate, there are more billionaires in Mexico than in all of
France.
Vicente Fox became president in 2000 promising to create the
one million jobs per year needed to keep up with the growth of
the labor forceat a time in which the number of unemployed
exceeded 12 million. His promise remains unfulfilled. Mexicos
anemic economic growth of about 2 percent per year has resulted
in growing levels of unemployment that drive tens of thousands
of desperate emigrants into the United States, some 2.5 million
since 2000.
In itself, this dismal record would have ensured PANs
defeat in the elections, or so it seemed. Last November, Calderón
was 10 percentage points behind Lopez Obrador, and the PAN was
tied with the PRI in opinion polls. Calderón came from
behind by presenting himself as tough on crime, distancing himself
from his partys clerical right wing and aggressively attacking
Lopez Obrador. At the same time, he positioned himself as a pragmatist
who would attempt to forge coalitions with the PRI and PRD in
Congress.
There is no doubt that Calderón is the darling of Mexicos
business elite. During the administration of Ernesto Zedillo (the
last PRI government), he helped negotiate the rescue of the Mexican
banks, when the government assumed their private debts, a giveaway
that at the time was denounced as the fraud of the century.
Central to his economic program is the expansion of Mexicos
energy sector through private investment including facilitating
drilling for oil in the Gulf of Mexico by transnational corporations.
Meanwhile, the discovery of evidence of fraud has stripped
the electoral authorities of their credibility. Mexicos
Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) began to count the ballots on
Wednesday in an atmosphere of distrust. Protests are planned across
Mexico by Lopez Obrador supporters to pressure the IFE. Given
the exceedingly narrow margin of victory, it is expected that
the final count will not emerge for several days.
See Also:
Workers' struggles intensify on eve of
Mexican elections
Major candidates offer no solution to the social crisis
[1 July 2006]
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