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Editorials | At Issue | July 2006  
Mexican Yuppies Fear Star Leader with Poor Under His Spell
Tony Allen-Mills - The Sunday Times


| Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, presidential candidate of the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), arrives home after casting his ballot at a polling station in Mexico City July 2, 2006. (Reuters/Andrew Winning) | Regardless of whether he is elected Mexican president today, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the leftist former mayor of Mexico City, seems assured of a healthy future -- he may have got the Aztec witch doctor vote.
 Lurking at the back of the huge crowd that filled the capital's historic Zocalo square for the closing rally of the presidential campaign, a small group of tribal Indian shamans, or medicine men, nodded sagely as Lopez Obrador, who is known by his initials, Amlo, promised to make history by getting rid of "mediocre and thieving politicians".
 The shamans had turned up in the city centre carrying large pouches filled with Amazonian plants and the bodies of small animals. They had hoped to make money offering ritual exorcisms of illnesses and evil spirits, and were surprised to find the square filled with tens of thousands of people chanting "Viva Amlo".
 The shamans stayed to enjoy the show, but there may be further surprises in store as Mexico votes in its first presidential election since the 71-year-old political monopoly of the formerly all-powerful Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) was broken by President Vicente Fox six years ago.
 This year's poll has riveted international attention on the prospect of yet another Latin American nation joining the left-wing populist advance led by Hugo Chavez, Venezuela's firebrand anti-US president.
 For most of the past week, Amlo, 52, has been confidently predicting he will make history by succeeding Fox as Mexico's first president to champion the poor. He was ahead by up to three points in the last opinion polls published a week ago.
 He devoted much of his final speech to his plans for his first week as president-elect, and thousands of his supporters have been wearing badges that read: "Smile, we're going to win."
 But victory is by no means certain for the man who casts himself as a caped Mexican superhero -- called "Ray of Hope Man" -- and who has promised to take only half the president's salary if elected. A last-minute surge by Lopez Obrador's conservative opponent, Felipe Calderon, may confound the populist trend and plunge Mexico into a volatile post-election brawl over the conduct of the polls.
 Under Mexican election laws, opinion polls are banned for the final week of the campaign, but that did not stop an elite club of pollsters and political analysts swapping the details of their private research at their monthly lunch on Wednesday.
 The pundits held a straw poll on the likely winner, according to Guillermo Valdes Castellano, a political consultant who was present. Of the 34 votes cast, 24 went to Calderon and only 10 to Lopez Obrador.
 Valdes Castellano said he had spoken to Calderon's pollster, whose daily tracking polls showed the Harvard-educated candidate of Fox's National Action Party (PAN) had jumped from three points behind 10 days ago to three points ahead by Tuesday.
 Much of the swing may have come from a last-minute barrage of negative television and radio advertisements paid for by Calderon, 44, a balding former energy minister who is so colourless that even his friends say he was "born in a suit and tie".
 Until last week, Calderon's most talked-about contribution to the campaign had been a vulgar television spot promoting his anti-crime policies as so tough that criminals were scared of him. The clip showed a supposed criminal wetting his trousers.
 Calderon's less than inspirational manifesto focused on stability and modest reform, but he appears to have been making ground by portraying Lopez Obrador as a Chavez-style radical whose reckless promises threaten fiscal chaos and rampant inflation. Forced onto the defensive, the former mayor has repeatedly denied he is another Chavez -- and has also been obliged to deny that his supporters will riot if he is robbed of victory.
 The impact of Calderon's warnings becomes obvious in the recently yuppified Mexico City neighbourhood of Condesa, a formerly shabby art deco district that is now filled with stylish new architecture, hip boutiques and Starbucks coffee shops.
 Condesa's transformation reflects the explosive growth of the Mexican middle class in the past decade of oil-fuelled comparative prosperity. Not only has the number of families in middle-class income brackets soared from 5.4 million in 1992 to almost 10million today, but the number of people taking out mortgages and car loans has grown by 40 per cent a year for the past four years.
 Alejandra Zarraga, a married graphic artist with a baby, belongs to the newly prosperous middle class, and she is terrified Lopez Obrador is going to cause a budgetary crisis that will cost her her new house -- a pleasant two-bedroom villa on a tree-shaded Condesa street. "If my mortgage goes up, I'm finished," she said.
 "The message Calderon is giving to families is that interest rates will go up," Valdes Castellano said. "Under the Fox Government, three million people bought houses for the first time. The number of people buying new cars has doubled. They have all got bank loans, and they are all afraid of Lopez Obrador."
 But it is equally true that Condesa owes much of its new look to Amlo's success as Mexico City's mayor from 2000-05. He revised traffic flows, reduced pollution and fostered development. This he did without bankrupting the city, and he says he can succeed on a national scale by cutting government corruption and waste to pay for his welfare programs. Amlo's closing rally left little doubt his message has impressed a broad swath of Mexico's long-neglected poor, from the urban labourers who marched into Zocalo under communist flags to the rural Indians who arrived on buses from Chiapas province, the home of Subcomandante Marcos and his Zapatista rebellion. If the poor turn out to vote en masse, Amlo may yet end up smiling.
 "The message from both candidates is basically the same," Valdes Castellano said. "They are both saying, 'I will improve your lifestyle and make sure you have more money'. That's why the campaign in the last days has been to attack the credibility of the other. The vote is about who has the most credibility."
 Calderon ended his campaign last week by accusing Lopez Obrador of deceiving Mexicans "with the lie that their income will increase as if by magic".
 Whether he wins or loses, Amlo may need some help from those Aztec shamans. | 
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