Teaching Comparative Government and Politics

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

PRD leadership

The politics of compromise in Mexico seem more remote after the apparent results of the PRD leadership election on Sunday.

Mexico leftist party picks ex-mayor with hard-line stance against Calderón

"A former Mexico City mayor who favors a hard line against President Felipe Calderón's government will be the new head of the country's main leftist party, according to preliminary returns released Monday.

"Alejandro Encinas [left] led former Sen. Jesus Ortega, a party moderate, by as much as eight percentage points for the Democratic Revolution Party's top job after Sunday's vote in samples of results released by two polling agencies...

"While final results won't be released until Wednesday, newspaper headlines and television programs declared Encinas the winner Monday...

"The party, known as the PRD, has been fractured by severe infighting since its presidential candidate, Andres Manuel López Obrador, lost Mexico's 2006 presidential election by half a percentage point.

"López Obrador alleges that the contest was stolen from him through electoral fraud, and his supporters refuse to have formal dealings with Calderón's administration. He has established a parallel 'legitimate' government with himself as its leader.

"Sunday's vote was seen as a referendum on whether the party's future will be dictated by the López Obrador camp or a by more moderate wing, which has worked with the executive branch to pass legislation, including sweeping electoral and judicial reform...

"Both sides accused the other of vote-buying, intimidation and improper handling of ballots. Problems were reported at 376 of the 4,976 polling places.

"The PRD controls 127 seats in the 500-member Congress, making it the chamber's second-largest party. It ranks third in the Senate with 26 of 128 seats. The party also governs several states as well as Mexico City."

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