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El Magonista - Support Surges For Claudia Sheinbaum in Mexico Presidential Election
El Magonista - Support Surges For Claudia Sheinbaum in Mexico Presidential Election
Presidential Election
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“We can already say today: Mexico, by the end of next year, will be governed
by a woman,” said Jesús Silva-Herzog Márquez, a political scientist at Mexico’s
Monterrey Institute of Technology, adding that it was an “extraordinary change”
for the country.
Ms. Sheinbaum has built her political career mostly in the shadow of Mr. López
Obrador, and had emerged early on as the party’s favored pick to succeed the
current president. That connection is thought to give her a crucial edge heading
into next year’s election thanks to the high approval ratings enjoyed by Mr.
López Obrador, who is limited by Mexico’s Constitution to one six-year term.
In recent months, Mr. López Obrador has insisted that he will hold no influence
once he finishes his term. “I am going to retire completely,” he said in March. “I
am not a chieftain, much less do I feel irreplaceable. I am not a strongman; I
am not a messiah... READ MORE
OPINION | WILL THERE BE A SPOILER
CANDIDATE IN MEXICO’S UPCOMING
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS?
Things haven’t played out exactly as Mexican President Andrés Manuel López
Obrador had hoped they might.
For months, his party, Morena, had carefully planned the selection of its
presidential candidate. Several months ago, López Obrador gave the green
light to start the primary process earlier than the law allowed, and most of the
plausible candidates in his party took up the challenge. Six candidates
registered, and the primary race soon narrowed down to the two most
prominent figures in López Obrador’s inner circle: the former foreign minister,
Marcelo Ebrard, and former Mexico City mayor Claudia Sheinbaum.
As the race kicked off, the party insisted it was running a fair contest: The
candidate would be chosen through a series of public polls. Fairly quickly,
however, it became apparent that Sheinbaum was being favored. Walls and
fences across the country were painted with her campaign slogan. Her face
peered from billboards and magazine covers.
Ebrard cried foul. “We have never seen so much lobbying, so many fake, paid
polls. I’ve never seen such a smear campaign, even against my family, as the
one we’re witnessing,” he said last month. Sheinbaum denied any bias in her
favor.
Ebrard has lost the primary, but he’s not out of the race altogether. As two
women square off in next year’s election, the former foreign minister is
weighing his options. Could he be a spoiler candidate?
Once the process ended, I asked Ebrard whether he had been the victim of an
unfair system. “I view the process as highly questionable,” he told me. Ebrard
also alleged mistreatment of his campaign official, Sen. Martha Lucía Mícher
Camarena, who said police forcefully prevented her from observing the final
tally of the party’s polls... READ MORE
By Mekahlo Medina | NBC Los Angeles | AUG. 31, 2023 | Photo by Ulises Ruiz
The two candidates have vowed to fight government
corruption and maintain the popular social programs
created by AMLO: more pensions to seniors and
scholarships for students.
A week before the political primary season in Mexico comes to a close, the two
biggest political coalitions are closer to nominating two women candidates for
president.
Claudia Sheinbaum, Ph.D., is leading in the race for the dominant leftist
National Regeneration Movement or MORENA party/coalition nomination. The
party controls congress and the presidency. It was created and is led by
popular president Andrés Manuel López Obrador, or AMLO, as he is called.
Senator Xóchitl Gálvez leads the conservative National Action Party, or PAN,
party race and just received support from coalition partner PRD, Party of the
Democratic Revolution. Along with the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI,
the coalition was created to unite against the popular MORENA party.
“When I asked the people, ‘Do you have relatives that live in the US?’ many,
many, they raised their hands,” said Sheinbaum, who invited DACA (Deferred
Action for Childhood Arrivals) students from the California-Mexico Studies
Center, headquartered in Long Beach, as her guests during a political rally in
Mexico City. “So, we are together.”
She has vowed to work with the U.S to help the DACA recipients gain
acceptance and open travel back and forth to their home country... READ
MORE
The decision driven by polls of Morena party members means that Claudia
Sheinbaum will run as the party’s candidate in the June election. Mexico’s
constitution bars outgoing President Andrés Manuel López Obrador from a
second six-year term.
Morena national council president Alfonso Durazo said Sheinbaum beat former
Foreign Affairs Secretary Marcelo Ebrard by double figures in five party
surveys.
“I’m excited,” Sheinbaum said, thanking each of her competitors by name with
the exception of Ebrard who was not present. “I feel very proud, very honored”
to have been part of this movement since its inception.
Sheinbaum, 61, led Ebrard in recent polling and both had stepped down from
their positions to campaign full time.
Durazo said “the result of this exercise is definitive,” adding that even though
there were difficulties they didn’t affect the final result. He called on party
members to close ranks behind Sheinbaum’s candidacy.
The main opposition, the Broad Front for Mexico, chose Xóchitl Gálvez, an
outspoken senator, to represent their coalition.
And the governing Morena party picked the former mayor of Mexico City,
Claudia Sheinbaum, to be its nominee.
Gálvez, 60, is a computer engineer who founded her own tech business. She
broke into politics as the head of the National Institute of Indigenous Peoples.
She grew up in an impoverished community in the central state of Hidalgo,
where she helped her family sell street food.
Her rise in politics has been meteoric and she is good at grabbing headlines.
Last year she lumbered onto the floor of Mexico's Senate wearing an inflatable
green dinosaur suit, to protest against a ruling party bill.
Women have made huge strides in Mexico's political arena in recent years, in a
country where they were not allowed to vote until 1953. They have made up
nearly half of the legislature since 2021. And a woman is currently chief justice
of the Mexican Supreme Court.
In contrast, the U.S. currently ranks 71 in the world in terms of gender parity in
politics. Mexico ranks at number 5.
Polls currently show Sheinbaum leading the race for president, with Mexico's
Reforma newspaper showing her with 44% support, and Gálvez with 27%.
The presidential election is scheduled for June next year... READ MORE
Mexico seems set to elect its first female president in next year’s election after
the country’s leading parties both unveiled women candidates.
Ruling party Morena said Wednesday that Claudia Sheinbaum will be its
nominee for the 2024 general election. She is set to take on Senator Xóchitl
Gálvez, who was nominated by the opposition coalition on Sunday.
They will be vying to replace current leader Andrés Manuel López Obrador,
who is required to step down next year as Mexican law prohibits presidents
from seeking a second six-year term.
Sheinbaum is a former mayor of Mexico City who has long been considered a
favorite to get the nomination. She was officially named Morena’s pick after
winning an internal survey on the party’s candidate.
Born in Mexico City in 1962, Sheinbaum has a degree in physics and a PhD in
energy engineering.
She served as Mexico City’s secretary of the environment in the year 2000,
when Obrador was the city’s mayor. Since then, she has maintained a close
relationship with the outgoing leader, supporting him in his three political
campaigns for presidency.
After four-and-a-half years, she left that post to pursue her ambition of
becoming presidential candidate for her party, of which she is a founder.
Her main rival Gálvez was officially named on Sunday as the candidate of the
alliance of opposition parties “Frente Amplio Por Mexico,” Mexico’s Institutional
Revolutionary Party (PRI) announced on its X account, formerly known as
Twitter.... READ MORE
First she must secure her spot as Morena’s candidate; the result of the party’s
selection process will be announced on September 6th. The 61-year-old former
mayor of Mexico City (a position equivalent to a state governor) has a strong
lead in the polls, thanks in part to obvious, if implicit, support from Mr López
Obrador. Ms Sheinbaum is almost certain to beat her closest rival, Marcelo
Ebrard, a former foreign minister. And Morena’s dominance of Mexico’s politics
means that, failing a major upset, she will be the country’s next president. That
would make her its first female, and first Jewish, head of state.
She shares much of the president’s ideology: a mixture of left-wing ideas, such
as increasing social handouts, and nationalist ones, such as favouring state-
owned companies over the private sector.
Between July 2018 and June 2023 Ms Sheibaum ran Mexico City herself. Her
record there suggests she would be a less ideological and more competent
president than her mentor... READ MORE
The major opposition coalition had already chosen another woman, Xóchitl
Gálvez, a sitting senator in the Mexican Congress, as its standard-bearer.
The two women — Sheinbaum, 61, a physicist and former university professor,
and Gálvez, 60, a successful tech entrepreneur — are set to face off in an
election scheduled for June 2.
The nomination Wednesday was largely overshadowed by a blowup inside the
ruling party, known as Morena. Sheinbaum’s chief competitor, Marcelo
Ebrard, cited unspecified “faults” in the primary process even before final
results were announced.
Ebrard, a former foreign minister, called publicly for a rerun of the internal
polling that ultimately gave Sheinbaum her victory.
He alleged that his campaign representative was beaten by police when she
attempted to enter the site in downtown Mexico City where ballots were being
counted. “I never thought I would live [to see] something like this in my own
party,” Ebrard wrote on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.
Gálvez, the opposition candidate, mocked the turmoil, inviting Ebrard to join her
movement.
Officials of the ruling party disputed Ebrard’s charges and said there would be
no new polling.
Sheinbaum won an average of 39.4% of the votes in five internal polls, Morena
said. Ebrard was second, with 25.8%. The former foreign minister was the only
one of the six Morena candidates who did not show up for the unveiling of the
results... READ MORE
Morena realizó una encuesta central y cuatro más con empresas privadas que
denominó espejo.
Molesto, Ebrard reclamó por ese incidente y anunció que no estaría presente
en la ceremonia nocturna para la que estaban citados los 6 contendientes y
donde se darían a conocer los resultados. "No vaya a ser que me detenga la
policía", dijo.