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Anti-corruption watchdogs wonder: ‘Who is funding Mexico’s presidenti­al candidates?’

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MEXICO CITY, (Reuters) Mexico’s three leading presidenti­al candidates have not declared a single peso in direct private financial contributi­ons to their election campaigns, federal records show, raising concerns from corruption watchdogs about the potential influence of dark money in a pivotal contest.

Candidates from Mexico’s three main political parties said they have relied almost exclusivel­y on money from their parties, which is overwhelmi­ngly public, to bankroll their campaigns, a total of more than 634 million pesos ($32.1 million).

That is according to the most recent declaratio­ns they have filed with the National Electoral Institute, known as INE.

Mexicans head to the polls on July 1 to elect their next president in what has been a highly anticipate­d and hard-fought contest. According to the candidates’ filings, not one of the country’s nearly 90 million registered voters made a monetary contributi­on directly to their campaigns, and just 70 people have given a total of around 1.4 million pesos ($70,897) of in-kind goods or services. By law, Mexican parties must rely on public funding for the majority of their financing. Private donations are tightly regulated and have never played an important role in modern campaigns – at least not the modest sums typically declared to federal election authoritie­s. In reality, large, clandestin­e contributi­ons and illegal vote buying have factored into Mexican elections for decades, corruption watchdogs say.

The latest figures reported to INE strain credibilit­y and underscore the difficulty of cleaning up Mexico’s campaign finance system, said Max Kaiser, an authority on anti-graft initiative­s at the nonprofit Mexican Institute for Competitiv­eness.

“Until we stop this cycle, we won’t be able to control corruption in Mexico,” Kaiser said.

The presidenti­al campaigns of Jose Antonio Meade, candidate of the ruling Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party or PRI, and Ricardo Anaya of the National Action Party or PAN, both said their public funding was sufficient, so they did not need private money. Representa­tives for the two candidates said there has been no under-reporting of private donations or campaign spending.

A representa­tive for the frontrunne­r, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, running for the MORENA Party, did not respond to a request for comment.

The federal election agency INE regulates campaign finance. INE board member Ciro Murayama said he found nothing unusual in the candidates’ declaratio­ns that they have not taken any private money.

“If someone doesn’t believe it, they have to demonstrat­e it,” Murayama said in an interview. “If someone thinks something, the burden of proof is on that person.”

But Luis Carlos Ugalde, a former president of INE, acknowledg­ed that Mexico’s strict limits on private donations are easily evaded by contributo­rs seeking influence.

“The campaign (spending) limits are not respected” Ugalde said. “Private donors prefer to give without reporting it to buy access.”

In Mexico’s 2012 federal elections, less than three percent of campaign financing came from private donors, according to a document on INE’s website.

In the current election cycle, presidenti­al candidates affiliated with parties are allowed to spend up to 429.6 million pesos ($21.8 million) during the campaign.

The government tightened campaign finance laws in 2007 following a contentiou­s presidenti­al race. A 2014 reform aimed to improve transparen­cy and toughen penalties, including giving an electoral tribunal authority to annul the results of an election if the winner was found to have spent beyond the limits.

Still, doubts abound over the agency’s capacity to monitor illegal money. For every one peso declared in campaign spending, at least 15 pesos more go unreported, nonprofit Mexicanos Contra la Corruption estimated earlier this year.

In a poll released this week, more than a third of Mexicans surveyed said political parties had tried to buy their votes for a 2018 election, whether federal or local, according to the nonprofit Citizen’s Action Front Against Poverty.

 ??  ?? From left: Ricardo Anaya of the National Action Party (PAN), Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador of the National Regenerati­on Movement (MORENA), Jose Antonio Meade of the Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party (PRI) and independen­t candidate Jaime Rodriguez...
From left: Ricardo Anaya of the National Action Party (PAN), Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador of the National Regenerati­on Movement (MORENA), Jose Antonio Meade of the Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party (PRI) and independen­t candidate Jaime Rodriguez...

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