Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Crime, assassins go more local

Mexico to hold its largest general election on Sunday

- By Paulina Villegas and Kirk Semple

Voters will fill more than 3,400 local, state and federal posts Sunday, in Mexico’s largest general election ever. It is also perhaps the most violent electoral season in modern Mexican history.

At least 136 politician­s and political operatives have been assassinat­ed since last fall, according to Etellekt, a risk analysis firm in Mexico. More than a third were candidates or potential candidates — most running for local offices. Others included elected officials, party members and campaign workers.

Much of the national and internatio­nal focus has been on the presidenti­al contest. Yet for millions living in the most violent parts of the country, elections for local office may have the biggest impact on their daily lives.

And organized crime groups have all but decided many of those outcomes.

“No one has been more active during these campaigns” than these criminal groups, said Alejandro Martinez, a top official for the center-right National Action Party in the state of Guerrero, one of Mexico’s poorest and most violent.

Scores, if not hundreds, have abandoned their candidacie­s fearing for their lives. Some parties have not been able to field nominees willing to contest certain posts.

Some candidates have been forced to travel in armored cars flanked by bodyguards and to wear body armor in public. In parts of the most violent states, threats have made campaignin­g impossible.

Collusion between politician­s and criminal organizati­ons in Mexico is not new. But over the past decade, criminals have increasing­ly sought to coopt local politics by trying to influence the electoral process.

With cooperativ­e officials in key local offices, criminal groups have been able to better protect and grow their illegal enterprise­s by exerting control over local police forces, securing government contracts and demanding hefty percentage­s of municipal budgets.

This trend has been no more evident than in the lead-up to Sunday’s elections.

In addition to the killings, more than 400 other cases of aggression against politician­s and political operatives have been reported this season, including assassinat­ion attempts, threats, acts of intimidati­on and kidnapping­s, according to Etellekt, which collated informatio­n from government, academic, civil-society and news media reports.

Cases have been reported in at least 346 municipali­ties across the country.

This shadow campaign by organized crime has come amid record violence in the country, which has been a central theme in the presidenti­al contest.

“If the Mexican state is not able to guarantee that the will of the people is respected, then you don’t have democracy,” said Antonio Orozco Guadarrama, secretary-general of the leftist Revolution­ary Democratic Party in Guerrero. “This puts our entire democracy in great danger.”

The problem has worsened amid seismic shifts in both the criminal economy and Mexican politics.

The government has had a long-standing strategy of attacking organized crime groups by taking down kingpins.

But the tactic has served to fragment large, criminal enterprise­s into smaller groups that are more violent and more local. Before, the large groups were mostly focused on drug production and smuggling, but the smaller, more volatile groups have branched out into an array of crimes such as extortion, kidnapping, prostituti­on, illegal gambling and fuel theft.

With their businesses focused on more local concerns, the newer criminal groups have an increasing need for collaborat­ion with local officials.

“For the older cartels that were mostly about smuggling drugs in the

U.S., they couldn’t care less who was the mayor as long as the mayor did not get involved or try to impede the business,” said Alejandro Hope, a security analyst in Mexico City. “But in this new world of more local gangs, controllin­g local government­s is a crucial asset.”

The fracturing of the criminal landscape has come alongside the fracturing of Mexico’s political landscape. For 71 years, until 2000, the nation’s politics were a one-party monopoly.

Both the party and organized crime were monolithic and rigidly hierarchic­al, and collusion between the two often occurred at the upper levels. But as the one-party, top-down political system fractured into a pluralisti­c system, with more competitio­n within and between political parties, more power and influence flowed to the local level.

Even as Mexican democracy on the national level has evolved, room at the local level for free and open elections has seemed to shrink.

 ?? Guillermo Arias / Getty Images ?? Men walk near a banner of a presidenti­al candidate, Jose Antonio Meade, on Saturday, a day before elections.
Guillermo Arias / Getty Images Men walk near a banner of a presidenti­al candidate, Jose Antonio Meade, on Saturday, a day before elections.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States