López Obrador on track to retain control of Mexico’s Congress, but with reduced majority
MEXICO CITY — President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s party and its allies on Monday appeared poised to maintain their majority in the lower chamber of Mexico’s Congress, but fell short of a two-thirds majority as some voters boosted the struggling opposition, according to initial results.
López Obrador’s Morena party will have to rely on congressional votes from its allies in the Workers Party and Green Party, but together they were expected to capture between 265 and 292 seats in the 500-seat lower chamber. Morena alone was expected to win 190 to 203 seats, according to preliminary vote counts.
That would signal a significant decline for the president’s party. In the current Congress, Morena has a simple majority in the lower chamber, holding 253 seats on its own. The projected result would also deprive López Obrador of a qualified majority of two-thirds required to approve constitutional reforms.
López Obrador appeared to acknowledge that new reality Monday. He praised the election as “free, clean,” and said Mexicans had shown a degree of political maturity “never seen.”
“You voted for two different and opposed plans, above all in the federal election,” he said. “Those of the transformation plan are going to have the majority in the Chamber of Deputies, and this means guaranteeing the sufficient budget for the most in need.”
More than 100 members of Mexico’s LGBTQ community are participating as candidates in Sunday’s midterm election that will fill the 500 seats of the lower chamber of Congress, as well as state and local posts across the country.
The results give the president sufficient budgetary control to continue his train and refinery-building plans and cash handout programs. But they may deny him congressional backing to escalate his ongoing spats with the courts and regulatory agencies, which have blocked some of his tougher proposals to empower state-owned industries and boost fossil fuels.
Opponents have said López Obrador is trying to dismantle checks and balances created during Mexico’s decades-long transition to full democracy.
“The voters have given a mandate that says ‘I am not writing a blank check for any of the movements in Mexico,’” said Luis Miguel Pérez Juárez, a political science expert at the Monterrey Technological university.
The opposition alliance made up of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, National Action Party and Party of the Democratic Revolution was estimated to win 181 to 213 seats. Those would be gains for those parties, which have often appeared rudderless in the face of López Obrador’s popularity and which still face the challenge of coming up with a platform based on something other than just opposition to the president.
Although the president’s name did not appear on the ballot, the midterm elections were seen by many as a referendum on his administration and his ability to continue what he calls the “Fourth Transformation” of Mexico. Turnout was high for a midterm poll, edging above 51% of eligible voters.
López Obrador’s party did better than expected in state governors’ races, and appeared headed for wins in at least 10 of the 15 states up for grabs. One of those wins was for the daughter of a Morena candidate who was accused of rape; she replaced her father on the ballot after he was eliminated for failing to report campaign spending.
“It’s an enormous achievement on the part of the president and his party’s coalition to have ratified their absolute majority, and to have won the election in spite of the Mexican economy going down as it has over the last three years … and the pandemic,” said Carlos Heredia of Mexico’s Center for Economic Research and Training.
The economy is cratering, COVID-19 deaths are escalating, and crime is rampant. But Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador remains popular.
At the same time, the votes mean López Obrador will have to listen more to the opposition, which he has traditionally dismissed as conservatives defending the vested interests and corruption of the past.
But the president’s party was battered in Mexico City, long considered his stronghold and where he once served as mayor. The capital suffered more than many other areas during the pandemic.
While voting was disrupted at only a handful of polling places Sunday, violence marked the campaign and the days leading up to the vote.
On Saturday, an employee of the state prosecutor’s office in Chiapas who was not authorized to be quoted said five people who were carrying voting material to polling places were ambushed and killed on a rural highway. And on Sunday, prosecutors said an additional four people were shot to death in another remote Chiapas mountain town in what appeared to be a politically motivated attack.
Mexico’s government is acknowledging that the country’s true death toll from the COVID-19 pandemic now stands above 321,000.
Nationwide, three dozen candidates were killed during the campaigns; almost all of the victims were running for one of the 20,000 local posts including mayors and town councils up for grabs in 30 states. In Guanajuato state, Mexico’s most violent, a woman who stepped in as mayoral candidate after her mother was slain won an overwhelming victory in the town of Moroleón.
López Obrador praised the largely peaceful voting on election day, and even sent a message of recognition to the drug cartels that fuel much of the country’s violence.
“People who belong to organized crime behaved very well, in general; there were few acts of violence by these groups,” the president said. “I think the white-collar criminals acted worse.”
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López Obrador has raised minimum wages and strengthened government aid programs such as supplementary payments to older people, students and training programs for youths. He has also created a quasi-military national guard and given the army a huge role in building his pet projects, which include trains, an oil refinery and airports.
But he has not hewed to a traditional leftist line, and has championed austerity in government spending. He has maintained friendly if sometimes tension-fraught relations with the United States and willingly helped keep tens of thousands of Central American migrants from reaching the U.S. border, an issue that will be the focus of a visit Tuesday by Vice President Kamala Harris.
The U.S. plans to send millions of doses of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine to Mexico and Canada. Those countries, but not the U.S., have authorized that vaccine.
Opponents depict him as intolerant of criticism and obsessed with a nostalgic 1960s vision of Mexico, when oil was king and state-owned companies dominated many sectors of the economy. Socially conservative and a professed Christian “in the broadest sense,” he has angered feminists with his policies, but has pleased many Mexicans by living austerely.
The elections represent the first mass public event since the COVID-19 pandemic hit the country more than a year ago, though case numbers have fallen and Mexico has vaccinated about a quarter of adults. The estimated death toll — 350,000, about two-thirds of them test-confirmed — does not appear to have played a major role in the campaigns, but weighed on voters’ minds.
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