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

Mexican Court to Rule on Fraud Claims
email this pageprint this pageemail usTraci Carl - Associated Press


A man walks outside Mexico's Federal Electoral Tribunal (TRIFE) building in Mexico City August 5, 2006, before its first public session. Tthe Federal Electoral Tribunal's seven judges will give this divided nation its first glimpse of how they plan to deal with leftist candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's allegations of widespread fraud and dirty campaign practices. (Reuters/Daniel Aguilar)
Mexico's top electoral court begins ruling Saturday on dozens of fraud complaints from the disputed presidential election, mulling requests for a full recount that have prompted thousands of activists to set up protest camps in the heart of the capital.

In its first public session, the Federal Electoral Tribunal's seven judges will give this divided nation its first glimpse of how they plan to deal with leftist candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's allegations of widespread fraud and dirty campaign practices.

Lopez Obrador, who stepped down as Mexico City mayor to run for president, is demanding a ballot-by-ballot recount that he says will show he was the race's true winner. Official tallies gave ruling party candidate Felipe Calderon, a former energy secretary, an advantage of less than 0.6 percent, or about 240,000 votes out of more than 41 million cast.

The tribunal has until Sept. 6 to declare a president-elect or annul the elections entirely.

Its judges will begin by ruling on 174 allegations of fraud filed by Lopez Obrador's lawyers. Those rulings will likely determine whether they will order a full or partial recount.

Supporters of Lopez Obrador have occupied Mexico City's cultural and financial heart, setting up protest camps on the elegant Reforma Avenue and in the city's main Zocalo plaza and snarling traffic for nearly a week.

Braving violent, nearly nightly rainstorms and even flooding, the protesters say they won't leave until the tribunal rules on their demands for a recount.

Gerardo Fernandez, a spokesman for Lopez Obrador's Democratic Revolution Party, said he expected the court to decide on the party's request for a recount sometime before Monday, but he added that party officials didn't have any indication of how the court would rule.

He warned against a partial recount, arguing that a full recount was the only way to put an end to allegations of fraud and questions about the country's electoral system.

Calderon says he believes the elections were clean and fair, and argues that a recount would violate a Mexican law that allows polling place results to be reopened only when there is evidence of irregularities.

Lopez Obrador's party won a small victory Monday when the tribunal voted unanimously to consider a possible recount.

But it dealt an apparent blow to the candidate's "shotgun" strategy of citing thousands of irregularities at the 130,000 polling places, saying it would not roll all the legal challenges into a single case, but consider each on its own merits.

The race was the closest presidential contest in Mexican history, dividing the nation along class and social lines.

Lopez Obrador has promised to govern for the poor, while Calderon has the backing of the nation's growing middle and elite classes, many of whom want to protect the new homes and cars they have been able to purchase with falling interest rates.

Maria Elena de Mesa Sanchez, a 59-year-old preschool teacher and one of several thousand Lopez Obrador supporters living in protest camps, cautiously welcomed Saturday's public session, but complained about the court's "slowness, given the national unrest caused by the election's irregularities."

Many have begun to question Mexico's electoral system, held up to the world as a model for emerging democracies after President Vicente Fox's historic victory in 2000 ended 71 years of one-party rule. Electoral officials have defended their work, and most election observers said the vote was fair.

De Mesa wasn't convinced.

"I hope that they don't let me down," she said of the tribunal's seven judges. "I'm waiting for a response that will satisfy the people."



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