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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Mexico
Mexicos election tribunal denies Lopéz Obradors
challenge to July vote
By Rafael Azul
29 August 2006
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Mexicos Electoral Tribunal (TEPJF) went into public session
on Monday and threw out most of challenges to the results of the
July second presidential elections. The challenges, questioning
the votes cast at some 40,000 ballot boxes, came from Andrés
Manuel López Obrador, the candidate of the Party of the
Democratic Revolution (PRD).
The tribunal nullified 237,736 votes, but did not disclose
where the votes were cast. Of the nullified votes, 81,080 went
to Felipe Calderón of the National Action Party (PAN),
76,897 corresponded to the coalition led by the PRD, and 63,000
went to Roberto Madrazo, of the coalition led by the Institutionalist
Revolutionary Party (PRI).
Though the TEPJF was careful to point out that its calculation
was preliminary and subject to change, there is no doubt that
its ruling paves the way for the tribunal to certify Calderón
as the winner of the July election. The TEPJF must certify a winner
by September 6. In the July vote, neither candidate won an absolute
majority; official returns gave Calderón and Lopéz
Obrador each about 35 percent of the vote. According to the initial
count, Calderón edged out Lopéz by a narrow margin
of 244,000 votes (0.58 percent of the votes cast). The Electoral
tribunals decision narrows Calderóns margin;
it does not reverse it. Lopéz Obrador considers himself
the real winner of the elections and had mobilized millions of
his followers to obtain a recount of all the ballots. Since the
July election, Lopéz has led massive protest marches and
addressed rallies of hundreds of thousands to press for a full
recount of all the votes cast. The PRD candidate has called for
a mass rally on Mexicos Independence Day, September 16,
which would either declare him president or chief of government
in resistance to a Calderón administration.
Lopéz refers to the September 16 rally as a National
Democratic Convention (CND). Meetings across the country
are being set up by his supporters to elect hundreds of thousands
of delegates to this protest. In addition to declaring him president,
Lopéz called on the CND to create new institutions that
respond to the peoples mandate.
Anticipating Mondays TEPJF decision he said, We
have no respect for their institutions; they are not of the people;
we will create new institutions according to article 39 of the
Constitution. Mexicos article 39 states that political
power belongs to the people.
Lopéz Obrador was careful not to spell out what new
institutions he is demanding. In challenging the PAN and Calderón,
Lopéz has been short on specifics. While insisting that
the government put the poor first and promising a
New Deal, those policies are never explained or spelled
out.
Lopézs tactic of popular mobilization is well
within the norm in Mexico and Latin America. Lopéz and
the PRD are committed to and financed by big business interests,
such as Mexicos richest man, Carlos Slim.
At the heart of Lopézs and the PRDs campaign
is a fear among sections of the ruling elite that behind this
election crisis lies a much more profound social crisis, threatening
the eruption of class struggle. Conditions are at a breaking point
for the middle and working classes following years of decaying
living standards, government repression, and increasing levels
of unemployment.
Feeding the flames of this crisis are the increasingly untenable
economic and social conditions facing most Mexicans, particularly
the poorest. While in 1978 a family had to earn two minimum wages
to meet the costs of basic necessities, today it takes four, condemning
40 percent of the population to poverty.
At its current growth rate of 5 percent a year, Mexico creates
600,000 jobs out of the one million needed each year, forcing
hundreds of thousands to emigrate.
Major events this year alone include:
* The explosion and collapse of the Pasta de Conchos mine in
Coahuila State on February 19, in which 65 miners died. The disaster
sparked a wave of walkouts at copper and zinc mines in late February.
Tens of thousands of miners and mine workers left their jobs in
solidarity with the Pasta de Conchos miners, victims of negligence
by the government, mine management, and their own union.
* A two-day national strike in March, which shut hundreds of
mines and mills, following a decision by the government of PAN
leader Vicente Fox to remove the leader of the miners union from
his post.
* The shooting death April 20 of two young workers as a result
of an armed assault to end a strike at the privatized Sicartsa
steel mill in the port city of Lazaro Cardenas in Michoacan state.
Thirty others were wounded.
* The brutal attack last May by Mexican police and security
forces against small merchants in the community of San Salvador
de Atenco, in the state of Mexico. Scores were attacked, including
a paraplegic who was beaten for refusing to get up. Seventeen
women have charged that they were sexually assaulted by the police
while in custody. Nearly four months later, many are still in
jail.
* The ongoing occupation by teachers of central Oaxaca in response
to a brutal assault on striking teachers on June 15. The teachers
and their supporters are demanding that the state governor, Ulises
Ruiz of the PRI, resign. Last week armed vigilantes and plainclothes
police invaded the public TV channel that had been taken over
by the strikers and destroyed essential equipment to take it off
the air. The assault is widely attributed to Ulises Ruiz himself.
Undeterred, the strikers occupied radio stations to transmit their
demands.
What concerns Lopéz Obrador and the PRD is that these
struggles could get out of control. His central role is to present
himself as a representative of the people in order
to preempt and block an independent movement of the working class.
In an interview published in the Financial Times on
August 22, after denouncing the current administration for being
controlled by the rich and special interests, Lopéz Obrador
made it clear that rather than replacing the government intuitions,
his aim is to restore popular confidence in the constitution and
the government.
In a separate interview with the same publication, Lopéz
Obradors financial advisor, Rogelio Ramirez de la O, stressed
fiscal discipline and made it clear that behind the candidates
populist rhetoric was a pro-business program. It is essential,
declared Ramirez, to distinguish electioneering on the campaign
trail from communications with the [financial] markets once you
are settled in.
See Also:
Mexico: Election court rejects Lopez
Obrador's demand for full recount
[8 August 2006]
Over a million march to demand recount
in Mexican election
[2 August 2006]
Election crisis in Mexico
deepens as one million protestors demand recount
[18 July 2006]
Mexican candidate files challenge
in presidential vote
[11 July 2006]
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