The Freeman

Mexico election race heats up as 2 women run for president

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Mexico City, Mexico --- Rival candidates launched their campaigns Friday for elections likely to produce Mexico’s first woman president -- a watershed for a nation with a long tradition of macho culture.

Opposition hopeful Xochitl Galvez took to the streets after the stroke of midnight in one of Mexico’s most dangerous states, seeking to tap into voter concerns about the country’s rampant violence.

Public opinion polls suggest that she faces a tough battle against ruling party candidate Claudia Sheinbaum, a former Mexico City mayor and close ally of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

Sheinbaum addressed large crowds of supporters in Mexico City’s main square, vowing to continue the outgoing left-wing populist’s “transforma­tion” of the Latin American nation, including measures to fight corruption and help the poor.

On foreign policy, she said that Mexico would maintain its close cooperatio­n with the United States, but would also demand respect for its sovereignt­y and “never bow our heads.”

With three months to go before the June 2 vote, Sheinbaum, a 61-yearold scientist by training, enjoys a significan­t lead with 63 percent support, according to an average of polls compiled by the Oraculus research firm.

Galvez, also 61, has 31 percent support, while Jorge Alvarez, 38, of the Citizens’ Movement party is a distant third with just five percent, polls show.

At stake is the future of Latin America’s second-largest economy, a country of 126 million people that is a key trading partner of the United States and a major tourist destinatio­n, but which faces huge challenges from illegal migration and drug-related violence.

Sheinbaum’s “biggest challenge is security because we’re experienci­ng a time of chaos,” said David Jimenez, a 49-year-old office worker at the ruling party rally.

‘People are afraid’

Galvez, an outspoken businesswo­man with Indigenous roots, sought to put the focus on the country’s insecurity with a night-time rally in the city of Fresnillo in the violence-wracked state of Zacatecas.

She led a candle-lit march through the streets before sharing the stage with a relative of one of Mexico’s more than 100,000 missing persons, holding a minute’s silence for victims of violence.

“Here in Fresnillo, as in all of Mexico, people are afraid,” Galvez said, hitting out at Lopez Obrador’s “hugs not bullets” strategy to tackle violent crime at its roots by combating poverty and inequality, rather than using military force.

“Hugs for criminals are over,” she said.

“To have a Mexico without fear, we’re going to restrain the most violent and aggressive criminal organizati­ons in our country,” she added.

It was the first of several planned stops in cities considered by their residents to be among the most unsafe in Mexico, to highlight what Galvez says is the government’s failure to tackle spiraling violence.

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