I am stealing today's cartoon in El Universal, as it is just too funny not to be shared:
A blog on the less illuminated sides of Mexican politics with a focus on political parties and actors. CURRENTLY suspended due to circumstances beyond the blogger's control.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Andrés Manuel López Obrador will be the left's 2012 candidate
The results of the poll were finally made public this morning: Andrés Manuel López Obrador will be the candidate of the PRD, PT and MC for the 2012 election.
The PRD will in 2012 be a party with a 23-year history, yet merely two presidential candidates.
I truly hope I am mistaken, but as far as I can see, this all but assures that the next president of Mexico will be Enrique Peña Nieto, and that the PRI will return to Los Pinos.
The PRD will in 2012 be a party with a 23-year history, yet merely two presidential candidates.
I truly hope I am mistaken, but as far as I can see, this all but assures that the next president of Mexico will be Enrique Peña Nieto, and that the PRI will return to Los Pinos.
Andrés Manuel López Obrador will again be the left's candidate for 2012
Andrés Manuel López Obrador will be the left's candidate in 2012, according to the results of the two polls released today. That is, he is the "best positioned" in the two polls he and Marcelo Ebrard had commissioned. He will now run on a coalition likely consisting of the PRD, the PT, and Movimiento Ciudadano.
Watch the conference now, live from Milenio TV
Cynical quote of the day
Enrique Peña Nieto, ex governor of Mexico State and likely PRI presidential candidate, is again in Washington, DC, appearing at the Woodrow Wilson Center. There, speaking of the needed structural reforms in Mexico, he declared,
"Neither the left nor the right, have the optimum conditions, as shown, to undertake these reforms"How bold. This, after the federal legislators controlled by Peña Nieto in the Chamber of Deputies has sabotaged and blocked virtually every major legislative initiative the past couple of years. Cynical quote of the day.
Michoacán governor election, more results and data
* According to the PREP (preliminary results based on quick count), PRI won the governorship with 35.39 percent of the votes
* PRI won 11 local deputies for congress, PRD 8, and PAN 5
* PRI won 46 out of 113 municipalities (with PVEM alliance in several), PRD and allies 30 (down from 41), and PAN 27 (up from 20)
* 54.2 percent of voters participated.
* Silvano Aureoles Conejo, the left's candidate, says Sunday's election in Michoacán should be annulled, given what he says was massive federal intervention in the election, threats against PRD militants, and PRI collusion with organized crime.
* Do does Cocoa, president Calderón's sister and PAN's candidate. She also demands a vote-by-vote recount, and the count of 879 ballot boxes that were not counted by the PREP. I looked at the PREP and made references to these here. I think, too, these should be counted again.
* The winner according to the PREP, Fausto Vallejo Figueroa, denies any narco ties.
* Yet Manuel Camacho Solís, coordinator of the Diálogo para la Reconstrucción de México (DIA) left front of PRD, PT and MC, says the left should accept the results.
* The federal attorney general's office is investigating 42 concrete cases in relation to the election
* PRI won 11 local deputies for congress, PRD 8, and PAN 5
* PRI won 46 out of 113 municipalities (with PVEM alliance in several), PRD and allies 30 (down from 41), and PAN 27 (up from 20)
* 54.2 percent of voters participated.
* Silvano Aureoles Conejo, the left's candidate, says Sunday's election in Michoacán should be annulled, given what he says was massive federal intervention in the election, threats against PRD militants, and PRI collusion with organized crime.
* Do does Cocoa, president Calderón's sister and PAN's candidate. She also demands a vote-by-vote recount, and the count of 879 ballot boxes that were not counted by the PREP. I looked at the PREP and made references to these here. I think, too, these should be counted again.
* The winner according to the PREP, Fausto Vallejo Figueroa, denies any narco ties.
* Yet Manuel Camacho Solís, coordinator of the Diálogo para la Reconstrucción de México (DIA) left front of PRD, PT and MC, says the left should accept the results.
* The federal attorney general's office is investigating 42 concrete cases in relation to the election
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