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Interest Aggregation and the Hegemonic Party System

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Presentation on theme: "Interest Aggregation and the Hegemonic Party System"— Presentation transcript:

1 Interest Aggregation and the Hegemonic Party System
MEXICO Interest Aggregation and the Hegemonic Party System

2 Functions of the Political System

3 PRI DYNASTY MORE THAN 70 YEARS OF POLITICAL POWER

4 Organization of the Dynasty
Interest Group Aggregation Peasants Organized Labor Middle Sectors Business Community – officially on the periphery

5 The Tlatelolco Massacre (1968)
Security forces fire into student demonstrations over expenditures for the Summer Olympics 300 + killed Major blow to the political legitimacy of the PRI-center regime

6 Economic Crisis cheverría increased social spending during an oil production and price surge. Did this through deficit spending. Falling oil prices along with higher interest rates caused inflation of peso and investment to leave. Bank of Mexico borrowed 360 million dollars to stop devaluation of the peso bringing Mexico’s deficit to $25 billion dollars. Echeverría let peso float and it then lost half of its value. Luis Echeverría ( )

7 Economic Crisis Intensifies
New oil sites found and developed Development increased Mexican national debt to unprecedented levels. Mexico became the 4th largest oil exporter in the world. With new oil revenue Jose Lopez Portillo ( ) vastly expanded social programs and developed state industries.

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9 El Dedo Falls on Miguel de la Madrid
1982 Elections Miguel de la Madrid PRI selects a young Harvard-trained economist as its presidential candidate Old guard marginalized ISI & social democracy abandoned Neo-liberalism Loosening of control by PRI

10 National Elections of 1988 Reaction to the neo-liberal policies of Miguel de la Madrid Left wing of PRI follows Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas out of the party Manuel Clouthier of PAN receives 17% of the total vote Dubious victory of Carlos Salinas

11 Reform: INTEREST GROUPS BECOME MORE AUTONOMOUS
NGO’s (Alianzas Civicas) Growing concern over civil rights Monitoring groups How much deception in apparent democratization?

12 Consequences of Institutionalizing the Reforms
Rise of the Opposition at the State & Local Levels Intra-urban experiences confirm growing capabilities of groups not tied to PRI 1997 congressional, state and municipal elections PRI loses its majority in the congress 8 governorships to the opposition Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas elected mayor of Mexico – and permited to win office

13 1994 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS
PRI – from Luis Colosio to Ernesto Zedillo Violence continues into the administration of President Zedillo Assassination of Jose Ruiz Massieu (party president) PRI and the drug cartel Assassinations (Cardinal of Guadalajara) Chiapas revolt smolders International pressure to democratize

14 Zedillo Institutionalizes Democratic Reforms – Consequences
Rise of the Opposition at the State & Local Levels Intra-urban experiences confirm growing capabilities of groups not tied to PRI 1997 congressional, state and municipal elections PRI loses its majority in the congress 8 governorships to the opposition Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas elected mayor of Mexico – and permitted to exercise the office

15 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS OF 2000
Zedillo refuses to exercise the dedazo PRD: the Last Hurrah for Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas Vicente Fox: from governor of Guanajuato to presidential candidate (PAN)

16 Presidential RESULTS: 2000
Vicente Fox 43.4% Francisco Labastida 36.9% Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas % Others 2.7% Presidential election results map. Blue denotes states won by Fox (19+DF), Green denotes those won by Labastida(11), Yellow denotes those won by Cárdenas (1).

17 2006 Presidential Elections: Did they undermine or strengthen democracy?
Felipe Calderon PAN political party Favored emphasizing free markets Focused on strengthening NAFTA Help from US political consultants

18 Andrés Manuel López Obrador
PRD leader Opposed turn to neo-liberalism Populist mayor of Mexico City The poor come first Some ties to Hugo Chavez

19 Roberto Madrazo: PRI Governor of Tabasco from 1994–2000
President of PRI – credited for bringing cohesion to a disjointed PRI after it historically lost the 2000 presidential election neutralized political adversaries within the party.

20 PRD Strongly Opposed NAFTA

21 2006 Presidential Elections: RESULTS

22 López Obrador: Challenging the official result
Claims fraud Demonstrations in Mexico City Threatens to establish parallel government

23 Key Institutions that deal with Mexican Elections
Instituto Federal Electoral The Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) is an autonomous, public organization responsible for organizing and overseeing federal elections in Mexico. Tribunal Electoral del Poder Judicial de la Federacion The Electoral Tribunal (TRIFE) is the top judicial electoral authority to resolve electoral disputes at the federal level or appeals of State Electoral Tribunal rulings

24 Legitimation of Official Results President-Elect Calderon visits Chile

25 Political Parties: Shifting Social Bases
Dramatic shift in the 2006 election PRI’s most dependable base before 2006 was the rural voter; did well with women and older voters. In 2006 PRD’s Obrador did best among rural voters. PAN did best among urban voters prior to 2006, but in 2006 PRD finished ahead of PRI for the urban vote.

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27 Political Parties: Shifting Social Bases II
PRD did well among women in Women were focused on economic stability. Education mattered less in 2006. Social class mattered less as well. Regional divides seemed to define the 2006 election.

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30 Mexico: Presidential Election (July 1, 2012)

31 Dominant Issue in Mexico’s 2012 Presidential Election
Violence & drug cartels President Calderon’s policies Performance (47,000 killed in six years) Alternatives Hugs not bullets Blocking drugs from reaching the U.S. (behind the scenes accommodations)

32 Other Issues in Mexico’s 2012 Presidential Election
Little evidence of outright fraud Intensification of tactics long employed by PRI (vote buying) PRI gift cards Media bias toward PRI Role of foreigners in petroleum industry Carlos Slim – media mogul

33 Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD)
Native of state of Tabasco Exited with Cardenas when PRI adopted neo-liberal reforms Mayor of Mexico City Edged out in the election of 2006 Popular vote ,896,539 Finished second % Challenged outcome for second time Exploring possibility of founding new political party Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) Nominee: Andrés Manuel López Obrador

34 Partido de Accion Nacional (PAN)
Native of Mexico City Long time militant in PAN Ally of President Felipe Calderón First female presidential candidate of a major political party in Mexico Popular vote ,785,728 Josefina diferente Finished third % Partido de Accion Nacional (PAN) Nominee: Josefina Vázquez Mota

35 Partido Revolucionario Instucional (PRI
Nominee: Enrique Peña Nieto Native: state of Mexico Long-time militant in PRI Leader of a new generation of PRI party leaders Governor: State of Mexico Repository of continuing suspicion of PRI and its style of governing Popular vote ,225,745 Winner % Partido Revolucionario Instucional (PRI

36 Presidential Election Results (in detail) (Mexico 2012)
Candidate Party Votes % Enrique Peña Nieto Institutional Revolutionary Party 18,727,398 39.10 Andrés Manuel López Obrador Party of the Democratic Revolution 15,535,117 32.43 Josefina Vázquez Mota National Action Party 12,473,106 26.04 Gabriel Quadri de la Torre New Alliance Party 1,129,108 2.36 Non-registered candidates 31,660 0.07 Invalid/blank votes 1,191,057 Total 49,087,446 100 Registered voters/turnout 77,738,494 63.1 Source: PREP (98.95% of polling stations reporting)

37 States won by Peña Nieto in green, López Obrador in yellow, Vázquez Mota in blue.

38 Chamber of Deputies Election (Mexico 2012)
Party Proportional representation Constituency Total seats +/– Votes % Seats Institutional Revolutionary Party 15,513,478 31.87 5,166,531 11.21 51 National Action Party 12,620,827 25.92 12,550,879 27.24 53 Party of the Democratic Revolution 8,996,089 18.48 Ecologist Green Party of Mexico 2,963,718 6.08 706,695 1.53 3 Labor Party 2,219,228 4.55 New Alliance Party (Mexico) 1,986,538 4.08 1,977,185 4.29 Citizens' Movement 1,943,855 3.99 Party of the Democratic Revolution–Citizens' Movement–Labor Party 13,088,355 28.41 70 Institutional Revolutionary Party–Ecologist Green Party of Mexico 12,533,771 27.20 123 Non-registered candidates 51,473 0.10 51,076 0.11 Invalid/blank votes 2,378,731 2,351,092 Total 48,673,937 100 200 48,425,584 300 500 Registered voters/turnout 77,547,511 62.76 62.44 Source: PREP, PREP (98.79% of polling stations reporting)


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