In Mexico, Lopez Obradors last stand
As the head of a government that purports to support democracy around the world (never mind that $2-billion-a-year hand-out to Egypts longtime, democracy-crushing dictator-president, Hosni Mubarak), George W. Bush has completely ignored democracys struggle for survival right next door, in Mexico. Many Mexicans have noticed Washingtons deafening silence.
As a result, now that its down-to-the-wire time there (Mexicos government must confirm who the next president will be by September 6), in recent days, leftist candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador (or AMLO) has reached out overseas in an impassioned appeal for support for his reform-minded, pro-democracy movement.
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Protesters set up barricades in Mexico City
Thousands of protesters set up barricades along Mexico Citys central thoroughfare Sunday night hours after the largest demonstration in Mexicos history filled the main square in support of leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obradors election challenge.
Police made no effort to intervene as the protesters set up tents and blocked traffic, apparently in response to Lopez Obradors call for the establishment of 47 permanent assemblies to press his claims of fraud in the July 2 elections. Lopez Obrador lost the vote to conservative Felipe Calderon by less than 1 percent of 41 million ballots cast.
Lopez Obrador's Lead Cut in Mexico Presidential Poll
Former Mexico City Mayor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the frontrunner in presidential opinion polls for more than two years, lost ground in a November poll, the first since the major parties chose their candidates.
The nationwide poll by Consulta Mitofsky found Lopez Obrador's likely voters fell to 29.5 percent of those surveyed from 37.9 percent in August. Support for President Vicente Fox's National Action Party grew, with 24.4 percent saying they'd vote for Felipe Calderon compared with backing of 20.2 percent in August for the party's then-leading candidate, former Interior Minister Santiago Creel.
Mexico Debate Sets Up Lopez Obrador to Challenge Chavez Image
Mexican presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will use a nationally televised debate tonight to respond to advertisements likening him to Venezuelas President Hugo Chavez, according to his campaign.
He has to show himself as someone who is secure and cordial to counter this image of an authoritarian leader, Manuel Camacho Solis, Lopez Obradors top campaign strategist and a former presidential candidate, said in an interview. He will just have to be himself and this image will fade.
Lopez Obrador, a former Mexico City mayor, goes into his first and only
Mexico election race turns as conservative surges
Mexicos ruling party presidential candidate appears to be pulling away from his leftist rival after aggressive TV ads propelled his dramatic surge in an election race being fought on economic policies.
A closely watched poll in the Reforma newspaper on Wednesday showed Felipe Calderon, a conservative, with 40-percent support among probable voters and his left-wing challenger Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador trailing at 33 percent.
Lopez Obrador, a former Mexico City mayor who promises to put the poor first, had been Mexicos most popular politician for three years and was the clear election front-runner until
Coup D Etat in Mexico
A COUP DETAT IS BREWING in Mexico. Even as he runs out of legal ways to challenge the July 2 presidential election results, the contests sore loser, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, is planning to proclaim himself president and establish a parallel peoples government on the national Day of Independence, Sept. 16.
The defiance by the leftist former mayor of Mexico City comes after a unanimous ruling Monday by the nations top electoral tribunal, which rejected claims filed by Lopez Obradors party of massive fraud. Lopez Obrador, who finished second in the balloting, has been waging an increasingly
Mexicos vote recount uncovers irregularities
With a partial recount of the July 2 election winding down Friday, AndrŽs Manuel L—pez Obradors supporters said the recount was uncovering enough irregularities to challenge official results that had scored the election for Felipe Calder—n of the conservative National Action Party. And the trend, leaders of L—pez Obradors coalition said, favored their candidate.
If the tendency holds, even if it is one or two votes per precinct, then put in a national context ... it would change the count, Horacio Duarte said at a news conference at L—pez Obradors main protest camp in central
Mexicos Calderon Leads in Universal Election Poll
Mexicos Felipe Calderon, a former energy minister for President Vicente Fox, took the lead in a voter opinion poll by El Universal for the first time.
Calderon, the National Action Partys candidate, led with 39 percent of voters preferences in May from 34 percent in April, the Mexico City-based newspaper reported today. Mexico holds presidential elections on July 2.
The survey is at least the fourth to show Calderon,43, overtaking former Mexico City Mayor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who had led polls for more than two years before April 25. Lopez Obradors support
Lopez Vows to Make Mexico Self Sufficient in Fuels
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the frontrunner in presidential polls for more than two years, pledged to make Mexico self sufficient in natural gas and gasoline in three years by increasing spending on the energy industry.
``Within three years, it's our promise and goal stop importing natural gas and gasoline,'' Lopez Obrador said during a Mexico City business conference.
Lopez Obrador said the lack of new refineries is ``criminal'' and promised to modernize the country's energy industry. Mexico now imports gasoline and natural gas from the U.S.
The candidate from the Democratic
Mexico's Lopez Obrador Slips in Polls; Maintains Lead
Former Mexico City Mayor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the frontrunner in presidential opinion polls for more than two years, slipped in two surveys released today while maintaining his lead over rivals.
Lopez Obrador, of the Party of the Democratic Revolution, led a nationwide poll taken by Reforma newspaper with 38 percent of likely voters saying they would choose him if elections were ``held today,'' down from 39 percent in January, Reforma said. The presidential election is this July.
``I don't think this changes the base-case scenario that Lopez Obrador will win,'' said
Jennifer Lopez Filming Movie in Mexico
Dressed in a blue shirt, khaki pants and a blond wig, Jennifer Lopez chased a bus and attended a street protest as a crowd of onlookers broke into applause.
The 37-year-old actress-singer was filming scenes Monday in the Mexican border city of Nogales for "Bordertown," a movie about the largely unsolved killings of women in Ciudad Juarez.
Lopez plays a Chicago-based reporter sent to Mexico to investigate the killings. The film, directed by Gregory Nava, also stars Antonio Banderas.
Traffic backed up around the set and hundreds of people crowded the streets of Nogales, across