Nearly 1 million protest Mexico election
Demonstrators pack Mexico City in show of support for leftist candidate
Mexican presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, center, waves to supporters as he heads a massive march in demand for a ballot by ballot recount of last July 2 elections in Mexico City, Mexico, on Sunday.
Updated: 2:43 p.m. ET July 16, 2006
MEXICO CITY - Hundreds of thousands of protesters marched through the
Mexican capital on Sunday to demand a manual recount in the disputed presidential election, led by a leftist candidate who says fraud cost him the presidency.
As a precaution, the Roman Catholic Church canceled Mass at the cityÂ’s downtown cathedral as supporters of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador began to overwhelm the central plaza to the sound of firecrackers and bands. Police officials in the pro-Lopez Obrador city government estimated the crowd at 900,000.
Conservative candidate Felipe Calderon, of President Vicente FoxÂ’s National Action Party, won by about 244,000 votes in the official count after the July 2 election.
Lopez ObradorÂ’s Democratic Revolution Party has appealed to the federal electoral court to overturn the official count, alleging illicit government and corporate help for Calderon, ballot stuffing and other irregularities. The former Mexico City mayor says he will stop the protests only if there is a ballot-by-ballot recount.
National Action has also filed its own challenges, seeking to stretch CalderonÂ’s tiny vote advantage. Calderon has said he believes is no legal basis for a complete recount, and has called on Lopez Obrador to respect official vote tallies.
‘Prepared to fight with ideas’
Lopez Obrador supporters such as Xochitl Luna compared the situation to the fraud-stained 1988 election lost by leftist candidate Cuauhtemoc Cardenas and said they were ready for a long struggle.
“We could be here six more years,” said the 43-year-old unemployed secretary, referring to the presidential term.
“In 1988 we were ready to take up sticks and stones,” she said. “Today we are prepared to fight with ideas.”
Marchers carried banners that proclaimed “No To Fraud!” as well as pictures of Calderon with a slash and the slogan: “It won’t happen.”
Fox ended the Institutional Revolutionary PartyÂ’s 71 year stranglehold on the presidency in the 2000 election. MexicoÂ’s constitution limits presidents to one six-year term and he leaves office Dec. 1.
Top Lopez Obrador adviser Ricardo Monreal said the July 2 election means that MexicoÂ’s fledging democracy is already faltering.
“If another abuse, another (electoral) theft is confirmed,” he said, “Mexico will never have clean elections again.”
A ‘marvelous man’
Some of Lopez ObradorÂ’s devoted followers have lit votive candles outside his campaign headquarters.
“He is the most marvelous man in the world,” said Eugenia Leal, a 70-year-old retired school teacher who collects a pension thanks to a city program instituted by Lopez Obrador. “I’m willing to follow him from here to the death, or wherever he orders.”
The dispute threatens to further divide Mexico along geographic and class lines. Lopez Obrador won in the mainly poor southern states, while Calderon swept most of the more-affluent north and northwest.
Lopez Obrador may never recognize Calderon as a legitimate president, setting up six years of sparring and protests that could threaten MexicoÂ’s political and economic stability.
The stock market and currency have swung widely in recent weeks as investors weigh the outcome of the dispute.
Calderon is building a transition team and planning a nationwide victory tour, even though his victory isnÂ’t official until the elections court issues a final decree by Sept. 6.
School teacher Ezequiel Torres, 53, said Lopez Obrador “represents hope.”
“The right is capable of calling the army into the streets against the public,” he said. “The people are tired, fed up, beaten by all that has been done by globalization governments. We want to undo everything that Fox has done.”
© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Yellow Revelution In Mexico... My Favorite Colour !!!!!!!
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