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Mexican candidate files challenge in presidential vote
By Rafael Azul and Patrick Martin
11 July 2006
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Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the presidential
candidate of the opposition Party of the Democratic Revolution
(PRD), filed a formal challenge Sunday to the officially announced
outcome of the July 2 election, charging fraud and other misconduct
by the Mexican election authorities as well as the administration
of outgoing President Vicente Fox.
The legal challenge follows Saturdays huge demonstration
in Mexico Citys central square, the Zocalo. Half a million
people assembled to protest the designation of Felipe Calderón
of the ruling National Action Party (PAN) as the winner of the
presidential election. Last week the Federal Electoral Institute
(IFE) tallied the results from all of Mexicos electoral
districts and declared Calderón the victor over López
Obrador by a margin of less than 244,000 votes. The winning margin
represents 0.58 percent of the 41.7 million votes cast in the
election.
In its 836-page filing with the Federal Judicial Electoral
Tribunal, the López Obrador campaign documented widespread
irregularities in the vote count. In particular, it noted that
the Federal Electoral Institute, which runs the elections, recounted
ballots at only 2,600 of the 130,000 polling stations, limiting
recounts to those stations with irregular tally sheets. This recount
of only 2 percent of the ballots slashed Calderóns
purported lead from 400,000 to 244,000 votes. López Obrador
has demanded a full recount of all the ballots, which he claims
will give him the victory.
Evidence of fraud
Other irregularities documented by the López Obrador
campaign or reported in the media include:
* Two-and-a-half-million ballots from over 11,000 ballot boxes
were not included in the preliminary results released on July
3 because of irregularities such as blank spaces in the tally
sheets, unclear penmanship and arithmetic errors.
* Ten ballot boxes were found in a Mexico City dump, mostly
from precincts that went to López Obrador. Loose ballots
were also found in the same dump. Similar events took place in
the 1988 election, widely believed to have been stolen by the
then-ruling PRI (Institutional Revolutionary Party).
* Tally sheets sent to the IFE differed in some cases from
the tallies attached to the ballot boxes.
When a vote-by-vote count was allowed by the IFE in one district
from the state of Veracruz, López Obradors total
increased by several thousand votes.
* A recount in one electoral district in López Obradors
home state, Tabasco, turned up an additional 20,405 votes for
him, according to the newspaper El Universal.
* There were unusual discrepancies between the number of voters
at particular locations and the total votes cast for president
or for Congress.
* There were an unusually large number of spoiled and blank
ballots, more than 900,000, which poll workers discarded on the
grounds that the voters intention could not be determined.
Eyewitness accounts published in the American press provided
examples of pro-Calderón bias in the conduct of the election.
A New York Times reporter visited Guadalajara, a city under
PAN control: Six ballot boxes were opened for a recount
in District 8 because of errors on the tally sheets. In every
case, the preliminary tallies turned out to be wrong. In one case,
polling workers had miscounted so badly that they gave 100 extra
votes to a third candidate, Roberto Madrazo of the Institutional
Revolutionary Party, and doubled the 235 votes for Mr. Calderón.
The Los Angeles Times reported the contrasting conduct
of election officials in two Mexico City neighborhoods, one where
the vote was pro-Calderón, the other for López Obrador.
In the upper-class San Miguel Chapultepec neighborhood, the district
electoral board refused six appeals from the PRD to recount ballots.
In the poorer Tlalpan district, the electoral board agreed to
recount seven boxes and López Obrador gained 310 votes.
Under Mexicos election law, revised after the evident
theft of the 1988 presidential election, there is no official
winner of the July 2 election until the election court issues
its ruling on September 6. The new president will be inaugurated
as Foxs successor on December 1.
In addition to the appeal to the electoral tribunal, López
Obrador has said he will seek to have the entire election annulled
by the Supreme Court, on the grounds of improper intervention
by President Fox, who openly campaigned for Calderón in
violation of Mexicos election law. PRD officials have also
cited the role of Calderóns brother-in-law, Diego
Zavala, whose company supplied the software used to review Mexicos
voter registration list, which is maintained as a centralized
national database rather than administered locally as in the United
States.
Ricardo Monreal, a top official of the López Obrador
campaign, said that Fox is the person primarily responsible
for creating this election of state, the phrase
commonly used in Mexico to describe PRI-style vote-rigging.
Walking the tightrope
While exercising his right to make a legal challenge to the
election results, López Obrador is proceeding with considerable
caution in stirring up popular anger over the evidence of ballot
fraud and the deeper social and economic issues which underlie
the electoral polarization.
This was evident at Saturdays rally in the Zocalo, where
the PRD candidate combined sharp verbal attacks on Fox and the
election authorities with appeals to his own supporters to confine
their opposition to peaceful protests that would bring moral and
political pressure on the judicial tribunal.
The enormous crowd was heavily working class, with many youth
and students as well, chanting, No to fraud, no to fraud!
and drowning out the speakers at the steps of Mexicos main
cathedral for minutes at a time. One chant indicative of the mood
of the crowd was, If there is no solution, there will be
revolution! Many protesters carried homemade placards and
banners denouncing Calderón and President Fox.
López Obrador denounced President Fox, calling him a
traitor to democracy for unfairly using his office
and the institutions of government in Calderóns favor.
He called on his supporters not to allow the country to turn back
to the past.
Mexico has a long history of voter manipulation. The most notorious
example of fraud in a presidential election occurred in 1988,
when the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) machine resorted
to the destruction of ballots and the manipulation of computers
to block the opposition candidate, Cuauhtemoc Cárdenas, and declare
Carlos Salinas the winner.
At Saturdays rally López Obrador called for a
National Day of Protest this Wednesday, July 12, to be followed
by another mass rally in Mexico City on July 16, two weeks after
the presidential vote. But he drew groans from the crowd by telling
them not to block highways or engage in other acts of civil disobedience
like those employed by the PRD and López Obrador himself
during protests against a stolen state election in Tabasco in
1994.
The most significant element in his speech was an appeal to
the Mexican Army as a founding institution and guarantor
of our sovereignty to guard the stored ballots. The military
is, in reality, the main guarantor of the interests of Mexicos
moneyed elite and its imperialist backers and the main source
of human rights abuses and repression against Mexican workers
and peasants.
This appeal was carefully calculated, a signal to the Mexican
ruling class and to Washington that if necessary López
Obrador, like Fox, would not hesitate to use troops against miners,
teachers or other sections of working people. Whatever differences
exist between Calderón and López Obrador, between
the PAN and the PRD, both are bourgeois parties which defend the
basic interests of big business in Mexico.
The role of the United States
Despite these assurances, López Obrador is being denounced
by Calderón and the conservative press in Mexico and Latin
America for not playing by the rules of democracy,
a patently anti-democratic attack on a legitimate demand for a
recount in such a razor thin election result.
Although under Mexican law Calderón is not the official
winner, and will not be at least until September, US President
Bush did not delay in calling him and congratulating him on his
victory over López Obrador. There is no question that the
Bush administration favors Calderón and the PAN. Vicente
Fox has become a junior partner of Bushs energy and border
security policies. During his administration, ties have been strengthened
between the Mexican officer corps and the US military.
At a June 2005 summit meeting in Waco, Texas, Fox agreed to
a so-called Secure Mexico policy that makes an amalgam
of the war on drugs, the war on terror and the movement of immigrants
across the Mexico-US border. The accord, which did not have to
be ratified by Mexicos Congress, also takes steps to further
subordinate Mexicos energy industry to US transnational
corporations.
Fox has defended Bushs decision to send the American
National Guard troops the border with Mexico against immigrant
workers. He publicly denied that this represented a militarization
of the border. Fox and Calderón are also committed to a
full implantation of the North American Free Trade Act, including
the unrestricted entry of cheap, subsidized US corn and beans
into Mexico, which will result in the bankruptcy of many Mexican
small farmers.
The US press has been overwhelmingly hostile to López
Obrador, treating his mildly left criticisms of big
business and government by the rich as though they were calls
for social revolution. The Washington Post, for instance,
in its editorial July 8, denounced Mr. López Obradors
extravagant (and fanciful) promises to reshape Mexican society.
It warned that the PRD leader ought not use the power of
his oratory, or the adulation of his followers, to nudge the country
toward class warfare...
At the same time, there have been suggestions that, at the
age of 52, López Obrador still has a political future if
he demonstrates his willingness to bow to the dictates of Washington.
There will be another election in 2012, and Calderón cannot
succeed himself. Moreover, the deepening crisis of Mexican and
world capitalism could well require the services of a demagogue
of López Obradors evident skill long before the election
calendar might seem to permit it.
A more farsighted imperialist observer, the British Economist
magazine, suggested just before the election that López
Obradors time might be now, writing: There are reasons
why a switch to the left might be good for Mexico. Mr. Fox and
his predecessors have wrongly assumed that what is good for favored
individual capitalists is good for capitalism. It is hard to disagree
when Mr. López Obrador rails against such privilege, or
against the inequity in NAFTA that requires Mexico to allow tariff-free
entry to heavily subsidized American maize...
The real worry, thus, is not that Mr. Foxs successor
will veer too sharply off the established path. It is that he
wont. An overhaul of Congress, the federal system and the
police, for starters, and reforms of competition policy, energy,
the labor market and taxes would help embed democracy and get
the economy moving. In that sense, Mexico needs a radical for
president.
The danger for López Obrador, for the PRD, the PAN,
and the Mexican and American capitalist elites is that the class
forces awakened in these elections, and on display at the rally
Saturday in the Zocalo, cannot be easily demobilized. For the
last six years, growing inequality and collapsing living standards
have pushed Mexico ever closer to class upheavals and civil war.
The electoral crisis could well become the trigger for such a
social conflagration.
See Also:
Near-tie election deepens Mexicos
crisis
[6 July 2006]
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