National Post

Ballots set ablaze as Mexico goes to the polls

- By Maria Verza and Peter Ors i

MEXICO CITY • Protesters burned ballot boxes in several restless states of southern Mexico on Sunday in an attempt to disrupt elections seen as a litmus test for President Enrique Pena Nieto’s government, while officials said the vote was proceeding satisfacto­rily despite “isolated incidents.”

Thousands of soldiers and federal police were guarding polling stations where violence and calls for boycotts threatened to mar elections for 500 seats in the lower house of Congress, nine of 31 governorsh­ips and hundreds of mayors and local officials.

Midterm elections usually draw a light turnout, but attention was unusually high this time as a loose coalition of radical teachers’ unions and activists vowed to block the vote.

The teachers’ demands include wage hikes, an end to teacher testing and the safe return of 42 missing students from a radical teachers’ college. Those students disappeare­d in September, and prosecutor­s say they were killed and incinerate­d by a drug gang. One student’s remains were identified by DNA testing.

Protesters burned at least seven ballot boxes and election materials in Tixtla, the Guerrero state town where the teachers’ college is located.

“We want the children to be found first, and then there can be elections,” said Martina de la Cruz, the mother of one of the missing students.

Soon after, there was an exchange of rock-throwing between protesters and hundreds of people who said they intended to defend their right to vote. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

Ballot boxes were also destroyed in the southern states of Chiapas and Oaxaca. In Oaxaca’s capital, masked protesters emptied a vehicle of ballots, boxes and voting tables and burned the items in the main square.

Municipal policeman Onesimo Rojas said masked protesters torched ballot boxes in at least eight places in the city. The state government reported 88 arrests related to the destructio­n of election materials and disturbanc­es in the capital, Tuxtepec and Salina Cruz.

Interior Secretary Miguel Angel Osorio Chong called it the “most watched-over” vote in Mexican history and said there were only “minimal” problems so far.

“That is good for all of us, to be able to carry out a calm process in which citizens may determine their next leaders and for that to be something normal,” Osorio Chong said.

Mexico’s National Electoral Institute reported that nearly 100 per cent of polling places were able to open.

Most of the nine governors’ races were too close to call, and in at least one race — for the governorsh­ip of the northern border state of Nuevo Leon — an independen­t candidate was a top contender, all of which is novel for Mexico.

Things are going badly. We have been moving backward

The vote comes amid widespread discontent with politician­s in Mexico, where a series of corruption scandals, a lacklustre economy and human rights concerns related to the missing students and suspected army massacres have tarnished Pena Nieto’s image and fed antigovern­ment protests.

Mexico needs “a complete change in the economic question, in jobs, in security,” said Juan Altamirano, a 52-year-old resident of Mexico City, who said he supports two leftist opposition parties. “Things are going badly. We have been moving backward.”

On a national level, Pena Nieto’s Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party was seeking to preserve its commanding position in Congress, despite the president’s diminished popularity.

Violence ahead of the elections had already claimed the lives of three candidates, one would-be candidate and at least a dozen campaign workers or activists.

Candidates have been assassinat­ed in the past, but the widespread threat to block elections is a new phenomenon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada