Mexico leftist vows no tolerance on
corruption after historic win
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[July 02, 2018]
By Dave Graham
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexico's new
president Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said he would pursue friend and
foe alike in a crackdown on corruption after voters handed him a
powerful mandate for government with a landslide election victory on
Sunday.
Lopez Obrador, the first leftist president since the end of one-party
rule in 2000, won between 53 and 53.8 percent of votes, according to a
quick count by the electoral authority, more than double the total for
his nearest rival.
That would be the biggest share of the vote since the early 1980s, and
would give Lopez Obrador a strong platform both to address Mexico's
internal problems and face external challenges like the threat of a
trade war with the United States.
Going into Monday it was unclear whether Lopez Obrador had done enough
to secure the first outright majority in Congress in over 20 years, with
pollsters' early estimates suggesting he was close in the lower house
but farther away in the Senate.
Speaking to reporters after his win, Lopez Obrador identified corruption
as the "principal cause" of inequality and the criminal violence that
has bedeviled Mexico for years, and said he would spare no one in his
commitment to root it out.
"Whoever it is will be punished, I include comrades, officials, friends
and family members," the 64-year-old said. "A good judge begins at
home."
The election was a crushing defeat for the ruling centrist Institutional
Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which governed Mexico from 1929-2000
continually and again from 2012.
Public anger over corruption scandals, which have shattered the PRI's
credibility, was a defining feature of the campaign, alongside
nationwide discontent over soaring levels of violence and years of
lackluster economic growth.
Lopez Obrador, a former Mexico City mayor, was greeted with rapturous
cheers by supporters in the capital's Zocalo central square around
midnight, while friends celebrated in his tiny hometown of Tepetitan, in
the poor southern state of Tabasco.
The victory was a vindication for Lopez Obrador, who was written off by
many critics after narrowly failing to capture the presidency at his
first bid in 2006.
Then, he cried fraud and declared himself the rightful winner, but
alienated many supporters with huge street protests that brought much of
the capital to a standstill for weeks.
He also began campaigning relentlessly around Mexico with the message
that he alone could fix the country's problems, calling out his
opponents as corrupt and inept.
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Presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador waves as he
addresses supporters after polls closed in the presidential
election, in Mexico City, Mexico July 1, 2018. REUTERS/Carlos Jasso
Finishing second again in 2012, he remained the most visible
opposition leader and by this year had become the focal point of
public frustration with the establishment's shortcomings.
Once results showed his margin of victory on Sunday, and mindful of
accusations that his instincts cleave toward authoritarianism, Lopez
Obrador quickly sought to calm nerves about his presidency. He
pledged to pursue responsible economic policies, respect private
property and guarantee individual liberties.
And he paid tribute to the role in the campaign played by outgoing
President Enrique Pena Nieto and the media, both of which have felt
the bite of his scorn in the past.
Mexican presidents are limited by law to a single term.
Lopez Obrador will take office in December facing a U.S. government
that has been openly antagonistic to Mexico over trade and migration
under President Donald Trump.
The newly elected president has said he wants to make Mexico more
economically independent of the United States. At the same time, he
also hopes to persuade Trump to help develop Mexico and Central
America in order to contain illegal migration.
Andrew Selee, president of the Migration Policy Institute in
Washington, saw a change from past Mexican leaders who were
"obsessed" about being on good terms with the United States
"It means that the U.S. can't take Mexico for granted any more," he
said. "Lopez Obrador will be pragmatic ... but he's not going to
bend over backwards to have a good relationship."
(Reporting by Dave Graham; Additional reporting by Julia Love,
Christine Murray, Anthony Esposito, Berengere Sim and Delphine
Schrank; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel and Catherine Evans)
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