Latest update: 08/07/2012 

- Mexico - presidential elections


Tens of thousands protest against president-elect

Tens of thousands of people marched through Mexico City on Saturday to protest against Enrique Peña Nieto’s apparent victory in the country’s presidential election, accusing his party of buying votes.

By Solange MOUGIN (video)
News Wires (text)
 

AP - Tens of thousands of people marched in Mexico’s capital on Saturday to protest Enrique Pena Nieto’s apparent win in the country’s presidential election, accusing his long ruling party of buying votes.

The protesters were angered by allegations that Pena Nieto’s Institutional Revolutionary Party gave out bags of groceries, pre-paid gift cards and other goods to voters ahead of July 1 national elections.

The students, unionists and leftists in the march carried signs reading, “Pena, how much did it cost to become president?” and “Mexico, you pawned your future for 500 pesos.” Mexico City officials put the size of the crowd that reached its central Zocalo plaza at 50,000.

“The fraud was carried out before (the election), buying votes, tricking the people,” said Gabriel Petatan Garcia, a geography student who carried a sign in Finnish.

MEXICAN VOTES `FOR SALE`
By Laurence CUVILLIER FRANCE 24 correspondent in Mexico City

Protesters also carried signs in English, Japanese, French, German and other languages to call the attention of the international press.

Pena Nieto, a youthful, 45-year-old married to a soap opera star, won last Sunday’s election by 6.6 percentage points, according to the official count, bringing the PRI back to power after 12 years in opposition. The party had ruled Mexico for 71 consecutive years, with what critics say was the help of corruption, patronage and vote fraud.

PRI officials deny the vote-buying charge and say the vote was free and fair.

The final vote count had Pena Nieto getting 38.21 percent support, leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador of the Democratic Revolution Party with 31.59 percent, and Josefina Vazquez Mota of the conservative National Action Party with 25.41. The small New Alliance Party got 2.29 percent.

The final vote count must be certified in September by the Federal Electoral Tribunal. The tribunal has declined to overturn previously contested elections, including a 2006 presidential vote that was far closer than last Sunday’s.

Accusations of vote-buying began surfacing in June, but sharpened later when people rushed to grocery stores on the outskirts of Mexico City to redeem pre-paid gift cards worth about 100 pesos ($7.50). Many said they got the cards from PRI supporters before the elections.

Lopez Obrador said millions of voters had received either pre-paid cards, cash, groceries, construction materials or appliances.

Some marchers covered the heads of statues with plastic shopping bags from Soriana - the supermarket chain where the gift cards were redeemable - to underline their protest.

“We have to come out in the streets to denounce that the PRI bought votes, and there were people who sold them,” said 32-year-old psychologist Raquel Ruiz.

Some protesters felt that overturning the election result would be difficult at this point, while others thought there were judicial means to still prevent Pena Nieto from assuming the presidency.

Syndicate contentMexico elections 2012

Lopez Obrador said he will file a formal legal challenge to the vote count in electoral courts in the coming days based on the allegation that PRI vote-buying illegally tilted millions of votes.

Simply giving away such gifts is not illegal under Mexican electoral law, as long as the expense is reported to electoral authorities. Giving gifts to influence votes is a crime, though is not generally viewed as grounds for overturning an election.

Leonardo Valdes, the president of the Federal Electoral Institute, has said he doesn’t see any grounds for overturning the results but that an investigation into the gift cards had been launched.

PRI spokesman Eduardo Sanchez said earlier this week that the gift-card event had been “a theatrical representation” mounted by the left. Sanchez claimed supporters of Lopez Obrador took hundreds of people to the stores, dressed them in PRI T-shirts, gave them gift cards, emptied store shelves to create an appearance of panic buying, and brought TV cameras in to create the false impression that the PRI had given out the cards.

Cesar Yanez, the spokesman for Lopez Obrador’s campaign, denied the PRI accusation.
 

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In Mexico democracy was sold for 10 dollars

In a country with 52 million people living under the poverty line the Mexican IFE spent more than 5 hundred million dollars on the worst election fraud. Poor people sold their vote for 10 dollars!!; the return of PRI and Pena Nieto is the worst setback in Mexican History, the PRI created our corrupted system, they have managed to create a country full of poverty, ignorance, and social inequality. Thousands of Mexicans are taking the streets to protest against this fraud, where are the millions that voted for Pena Nieto? Mexicans celebrate pretty much everything, Why no one in this country is celebrating Pena's Nieto triumph? Personally I don't care about any political party but what really bothers me is the fact that in Mexico all the laws and Institutions like the IFE are so full of corruption, no one respects the laws, powerful politicians are full of contempt, they don't care about the present or the future of 120 millions of Mexicans. In 6 years 60 thousand people got killed in drug-violence related episodes, Mexico has one of the worst education systems in the world, thousands of kids don't even get 6 years of school, is really sad to see that Pena Nieto and the PRI used their money and power to "buy" the dignity and the future of this country. I feel ashamed of belong to a country where democracy is just an illusion, where all the lies become "the truth" just because TV say so.

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