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ANALYSIS:
POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENTS IN
MEXICO
Presidential
Primary And
Election
Mexico's long-ruling
and dominant
political party,
the
Institutional
Revolutionary
Party (PRI), for
the first time
in its 70-year
history opened
the selection
process for its
presidential
candidate in a
Nov. 7 primary.
Francisco
Labastida Ochoa,
a former state
governor and
cabinet official,
won the vote by
taking 272 of
300 electoral
districts,
according to
preliminary
results
announced by the
party. In the
process,
Labastida was
positioned as
the frontrunner
for the July
2000
presidential
election.
Four candidates
ran in the PRI
primary.
Roberto Madrazo,
state governor
in Tabasco, was
Labastida's main
challenger.
Because of
challenges
within the
party, PRI, the
most powerful
party in the
last 70 years,
became
fractionalized.
The main
opposition
candidates in
the 2000
presidential
election were
Vicente Fox, a
former state
governor and
president of
Coca-Cola de
México, who was
running for the
conservative
National Action
Party (PAN), and
Cuauhtémoc
Cárdenas, a
former governor
and leader of
the left-of-center
Democratic
Revolutionary
Party (PRD).
Neither party
had an open
primary. Fox was
popular in the
north of Mexico,
with businessmen
and with
Mexico's growing
middle-class.
Cárdenas'
natural
constituency was
the urban
working class.
Fox performed
well in polls
and Cárdenas had
long been an
important voice
in Mexico's
politics.
The July 2, 2000
national
election was
historic on
several accounts.
Internal reforms
over the past
decade have led
to significant
changes in the
nation's
political
landscape,
dramatically
opening up the
electoral
process.
This was the
first time in
Mexico's modern
political
history that a
sitting
president did
not choose his
successor.
Additionally,
Mexico had been
undergoing
profound social
and economic
changes. However,
The
Institutional
Revolutionary
Party (PRI) had
held the
presidency
uninterrupted
since 1929.
Vicente Fox
Quesada of the
Alliance for
Change Coalition,
headed by the
National Action
Party (PAN), won
the 2000
elections with
43% of the vote,
beating
Francisco
Labastida the
PRI candidate
who won 36% of
the vote. These
elections are
considered to
have been the
most free and
fair elections
in Mexico's
history. Fox's
Presidential
term began on
December 1,
2000. This
election was a
big step for
Mexico toward a
greater
democracy.
After the 2000
presidential
election, many
political
analysts
believed that
the PRI's
political power
was declining in
Mexico. However,
the PRI
continues to
hold the most
seats in both
the Chamber of
Deputies and the
Senate, with 211
seats in the
former and 60
seats in the
latter. Yet, as
a result of the
2000 elections,
other parties
have gained
seats and the
Congress is more
diverse than
ever. In the
Chamber of
Deputies:
211 seats are
held by the PRI;
206 by PAN; 50
by the PRD;17 by
PVEM; and the
remaining 16
seats are split
among smaller
parties.
In the Senate:
The PRI holds 60
seats; PAN holds
46; PRD holds
15; PVEM holds 5
seats; and two
smaller parties
each have one of
the remaining
two seats.
State and local
elections have
been a mix of
success and
defeat for
various parties.
State
Elections
In 2001,
thirteen Mexican
states have
scheduled state
and municipal
elections. The
elections began
on May 27, 2001
in the state of
Yucatan.
Political
analysts are
trying to find
broad
implications in
these 2001 state
and municipal
elections.
Leaders of the
National Action
Party (PAN), who
succeeded in
helping to elect
Vicente Fox
Quesada
President of
Mexico in July
2000, are eager
to build upon
this victory,
while leaders of
the
Institutional
Revolutionary
Party (PRI) hope
to rebuild its
political
leadership. In
recent elections,
the PRI has lost
12 statehouses,
Mexico City's
mayoralty,
majorities in
the Chamber of
Deputies and the
Senate, and the
Presidency. At
the same time,
the Democratic
Revolutionary
Party (PRD) is
looking to pick
up at least two
governorships
after it faired
poorly in the
Mexican
Presidential
elections. Its
candidate failed
to receive even
one-fifth of the
votes cast.
See Table
Tabasco (August
5, 2001)
Results from an
October 2000
Tabasco election
were overturned
by a federal
court, saying
the elections in
the southeast
Gulf state were
fraught with
errors. New
elections were
held on August
5th under
careful watch of
election
monitors.
Manuel Andrade,
the PRI
candidate was
declared the
winner of the
overturned
October vote,
but Enrique
Priego was
declared the
winner of the
August 2001
vote.
Chiapas (October
7, 2001)
Mexico's former
ruling party,
the PRI, won the
majority of
local municipal
and
congressional
races during the
elections in the
southern state
of Chiapas. The
state election
commission
reported that
the PRI won 72
out of 118
mayorships and
21 of 40 local
congressional
seats. The PRD
won 20
mayorships and
two legislative
seats, while the
PAN, which
governs the
state of
Chiapas, won 11
mayorships and
one legislative
seat.
Landmark
Elections: July
2000
On July 2, 2000,
Mexico held the
most transparent
and fair
elections in its
history and the
US-Mexico
Chamber of
Commerce (USMCOC)
was there to
witness it. The
Chamber led a
delegation of
ten business
representatives,
headed by
President Albert
Zapanta, who
were invited and
credentialed as
official
observers by
Mexico's Federal
Electoral
Institute (IFE).
The results of
the election are
another
milestone in
Mexico's forward
movement in
becoming a
modern democracy.
While the
election result
will promote a
cascade of
changes in the
way Mexican
citizens look at
government and
governance, the
most important
change is that
now Mexicans
know that their
vote counts.
Recent reforms
and changes gave
momentum to the
feeling that
this time the
voice and will
of the people
would be heard
and heeded. And
it was.
The delegation
concurred that
the elections
were a watershed
event in
Mexico's
political
history. They
were
trailblazing not
only because
they marked the
first time in 71
years that a
president from a
party other than
the PRI has been
elected, but
also because the
elections were
peaceful and
judged by the
international
community, and
most importantly,
by Mexicans to
be fair.
Although there
were some minor
glitches, the
elections were
as fair and free
as could have
been. The
Mexican
electorate
showed
enthusiasm, hope,
and patience in
voting, with
waits of two-to-three
hours to vote in
some places.
This did not
discourage the
people from
voting.
The Electoral
Process
The
IFE was
responsible for
organizing not
only the
elections for
president, but
also those for
the Chamber of
Deputies, one-third
of the Senate,
the mayoralty of
Mexico City, as
well as state
and local
elections.
Thousands of
candidates,
representing
eleven parties
were vying for
these positions.
The IFE
recruited over
three million
volunteers and
set up 113,424
voting stations
throughout the
country's 300
electoral
districts to
accommodate the
58,789,209
registered
voters.
The delegation
witnessed the
voting routine,
which generally
went as follows.
First, a voter
was required to
show his
identification
card to election
officials, who
proceeded to
check that the
identification
card number
corresponded to
the number and
picture in the
election
register. The
voter then was
given color-coded
ballots
corresponding to
each of the
elections, i.e.
for president,
congress, etc.
The voter then
went on to cast
his or her vote
in a curtained
booth that
allowed for full
privacy. It
should be noted
that election
observers were
in a position to
see whether the
voter in fact
cast one ballot,
since the ballot
boxes were
transparent.
The rationale
behind having
transparent
ballot boxes is
to avoid the
accusation of
past practices
of ballot box
stuffing.
Finally, the
voter had his or
her election
card checked and
indelible ink
put on his or
her thumb. The
latter was done
to ensure that
no one attempted
to vote more
than once, a
common
accusation in
previous
elections.
The first round
of counting the
votes was done
at the local
polling sites,
with IFE
officials
tabulating and
party
representatives
monitoring. The
results were
then posted on
the doors of the
voting station
and the ballots
delivered to a
district office,
where the
results were put
into a computer.
The district
head offices fed
the polling data
it collected to
four separate
computers to
ensure against
any failures as
experienced in a
previous very
close election.
On the basis of
an IFE
calculation
referred to as a
"fast count"
President
Zedillo was able
to announce that
the Coalition
for Change
candidate,
Vicente Fox
Quesada was the
winner of the
presidential
race. According
to the final
tally, of the
37,103,466 votes
cast, Mr. Fox
got 42.54% of
the votes,
followed by PRI
candidate
Francisco
Labastida with
36.07% and
Chautemoc
Cardenas of the
PRD with
16.65%.
Congress and
Multi-party
Democracy
In the race for
Congress, the
Partido Accion
Nacional (PAN)
increased its
numbers in both
the Chamber of
Deputies and in
the Senate.
However, the PAN
did not win
enough seats to
win a majority
in Congress,
although they
now have the
plurality, in
conjunction with
the Coalition
for Change
member Green
Party (PVEM).
This
circumstance
will force the
PAN to have to
build alliances
with the
political
opposition; an
exercise that
many believe
will further
strengthen
Mexico's
democracy and
assure the long-term
sustainability
of legislative
initiatives.
Landmark
Elections: July
1997
Mexico City's
voters for the
first time in
recent history
elected their
own mayor,
Cuauhtémoc
Cárdenas, who
was inaugurated
Dec. 5, 1997.
Candidates
throughout the
country also
contested six
state
governorships,
the entire 500-seat
Chamber of
Deputies, and a
quarter of the
128-seat Senate
during a July 6,
1997, vote. The
elections
resulted in a
significant
political
setback for the
PRI, which has
dominated
Mexico's
political scene
for nearly seven
decades.
Opposition
parties captured
the Mexico City
mayor's post (PRD)
and two state
governorships (both
PAN). In
addition, the
ruling party
failed to
maintain an
absolute
majority in the
Chamber of
Deputies, the
lower house of
Congress (the
PRI holds 239
seats, the PRD
125 and the PAN
121; the
remaining 15 are
held by the PVEM
and PT).
Since the
election, four
opposition
parties have
used their
combined
majority to
elect a leader
from the left-of-center
PRD and take
control of 32 of
the 61
legislative
committees in
the Chamber of
Deputies. The
opposition's new-found
power did not
derail President
Zedillo's budget
proposal for
1998. The 1999
budget proposal,
however, met
stiff opposition
and was only
passed at the
last minute, Dec.
31, following a
marathon
legislative
session. The
final deal
eliminates phone
taxes outlined
in the
president's
proposal but
includes $1.4
billion in
spending cuts,
higher taxes on
business and the
top earners and
higher import
tariffs on goods
from countries
that do not have
a free-trade
deal with Mexico.
The agreement,
forged between
the PAN and the
PRI, maintained
the 1999 fiscal
deficit target
at 1.25 percent
of gross
domestic product.
September 2001
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