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Mexico’s Presidential Elections
La Prensa San Diego - Mexico’s presidential race has been consumed by attacks that have deeply scored the finish of the country’s newly-minted democracy. As negative campaign ads continue, and corruption allegations seize center stage, it appears evermore likely that the legacy of the presidential race will be that of a deeply divided country.
This already has become a reality: a June 16 survey by the Mexico City daily Excelsior found that at least half the country expects that one of the three major presidential candidates will not passively accept the results of a narrow defeat.
Polls suggest that the top two candidates – Andrés Manuel López Obrador of the Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD) and Felipe Calderón Hinojosa of the Partido Acción Nacional (PAN) - are locked into an unusually tight race. Even if the outcome is not disputed, the winner on July 2 will be forced to deal with a sharply divided legislature. And the incoming president will have won only a thin plurality of votes: no candidate has topped 40 percent in national surveys in recent weeks. As the country hurtles towards election day, one thing is certain: the path both before and after July 2 is bound to be treacherous.
Abogados Junio 29, 2006 08:22 PM | Prestamos | Preguntas Para Abogados