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

Mexico Left Names Own "President"
email this pageprint this pageemail usFrank Jack Daniel - Reuters


Thousands gather for a rally in support of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador at Mexico City's Zocalo Plaza, Saturday, Sept. 16, 2006. (AP/Marco Ugarte)
Mexican leftists, who say the July 2 election was stolen, declared their candidate the "legitimate president" on Saturday, a symbolic move reducing the risk of street protests to make the country ungovernable.

Aides said Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who narrowly lost the election, would use mainly political means rather than widespread protests in leading opposition to conservative President-elect Felipe Calderon.

Tens of thousands of leftists meeting in the capital's vast downtown central square rejected a proposal to name Lopez Obrador head of a civil resistance campaign, which would have marked a more aggressive strategy to try to stop Calderon from ruling.

The election sharply divided Mexico along class lines, a rift made worse by Lopez Obrador's fraud accusations.

But fears of violence have eased in recent days as Lopez Obrador has apparently opted for an organized political movement to challenge Calderon rather than cause chaos on the streets.

Supporters voted to swear Lopez Obrador in at a ceremony on November 20, just days before Calderon takes power on December 1.

"We won the presidential election. I accept the post of president of Mexico because we reject an imposition," he told cheering followers.

"You are not alone," they shouted.

Mexico's top election court rejected Lopez Obrador's fraud claims and named Calderon president-elect by a tiny margin of 234,000 votes out of 41 million cast.

Lopez Obrador launched a civil resistance campaign in August and his supporters blockaded central Mexico City, foreign banks and government ministries.

The campaign caused traffic chaos in the capital but did little to help him win support.

An almost seven-week blockade of the Zocalo and Mexico's central business district ended on Friday.

There will, however, be sporadic protests in coming weeks, and delegates at a convention led by Lopez Obrador on Saturday voted to support a boycott against some of Mexico's biggest companies, who they believe backed Calderon's campaign.

They included the Mexican units of major U.S. firms such as retailer Wal-Mart and financial giant Citigroup.

Earlier on Saturday, leftists protested against President Vicente Fox at the nation's independence day military parade.

They waved posters that read: "Fox, traitor to democracy," in the downtown Zocalo square as the outgoing president reviewed columns of troops and military hardware.



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