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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | July 2006 

Mexican Conservative Wins Tight Election Battle
email this pageprint this pageemail usKieran Murray & Greg Brosnan - Reuters


Mexican presidential candidate, Felipe Calderon of the National Action Party, PAN, gets his hand raised while celebrating at his party's headquarters in Mexico City, Mexico on Thursday July 6, 2006. (AP/Dario Lopez-MIlls)
Conservative presidential candidate Felipe Calderon won a narrow victory on Thursday in an election that divided Mexico, but his leftist rival vowed to fight the result in the courts and on the streets.

The Harvard-educated Calderon was elected with 35.88 percent of the vote and Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, a combative left-wing former Mexico City mayor, trailed close behind on 35.31 percent, final official results showed.

Lopez Obrador angrily claimed the election last Sunday was plagued with irregularities and pledged to fight it in Mexico's electoral tribunal.

He also called a rally of supporters in Mexico City's vast central square for Saturday, raising fears of street protests and further unrest as well as weeks of legal wrangling similar to that which followed the U.S. presidential election in 2000.

"We cannot recognize or accept these results," he said.

A relaxed Calderon led supporters in a noisy party at his ruling National Action Party's offices and immediately called on his adversaries to forget an ugly and fiercely contested election that has plunged Mexico into a political crisis.

"If the contest is behind us, our differences are behind us. Now is the hour for unity and agreements between Mexicans," said Calderon, a pro-U.S. former energy minister.

Calderon, 43, would be an ally of the United States in Latin America, where leftists have taken power in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Uruguay and Venezuela and turned away from Washington.

At home, Calderon promises to clamp down on violent criminals and powerful drug trafficking gangs as well as create millions of jobs with pro-business reforms, more foreign investment and a boom in construction.

He was the clear favorite of investors and Mexico's financial markets jumped on news of his victory. The stock market was up 2.7 percent in afternoon trade and the peso currency gained 1.6 percent.

In Mexico City's Pensil neighborhood, a working-class warren of dilapidated tenements and greasy car repair shops that staunchly backs Lopez Obrador, the mood was somber.

"ROBIN HOOD"

Angry supporters gathered in doorways and on street corners raging against the electoral institute and Calderon's party. One bewildered group thronged around a newspaper stand, staring incredulously at front page pictures of a jubilant Calderon.

"It's as if somebody stole your child," said taco-seller Beatriz Montoy, vowing to attend Saturday's rally to support the man she referred to as her "Robin Hood."

"We're not going to let them do this," she said. "There is going to be an avalanche of people."

Lopez Obrador had led the recount for hours but Calderon overtook him in the early hours of Thursday as the last votes came in from his strongholds in northern and western Mexico.

Hundreds of supporters, many of them young professionals dressed in suits or fashionable jeans, packed into Calderon's party offices to toast his win with champagne and tequila.

The narrow victory margin and months of animosity between left and right have many fearing weeks of legal battles and massive street protests ahead.

"If a revolution is needed, a revolution there will be," said Guadalupe Tellez, a 53-year-old Lopez Obrador supporter who wept outside the leftist's modest Mexico City apartment. "He is the only person who wanted to help the people."

Lopez Obrador was the red-hot favorite for most of the campaign, but Calderon closed the gap by painting his rival as a danger to Mexico's economic stability and linking him to anti-U.S. firebrand Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

When Calderon was judged to have won a preliminary count earlier this week, Lopez Obrador cried foul and protests broke out in the capital.

Lopez Obrador pledged to help Mexico's poor with welfare benefits and ambitious infrastructure projects to create jobs.

He won wide support in Mexico City but his spending policies worried investors, business leaders and many middle-class families. He also failed to make major inroads in traditionally conservative northern Mexico.

(Additional reporting by Noel Randewich and Frank Jack Daniel)



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