Los Angeles Times

Baja vote may decide fate of Mexican party

The National Action Party has held the state since 1989. A loss in this election could cause lasting harm.

- By Tracy Wilkinson wilkinson@latimes.com

MEXICO CITY — The year was 1989. The Berlin Wall came down. Czechoslov­akia was experienci­ng its Velvet Revolution. Chinese were demanding democracy in Tiananmen Square.

And in Mexico, the first cracks emerged in what had been more than six decades of one-party rule. For the first time in its history, the ruling Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party, or PRI, which had molded modern Mexico, lost a state government, in Baja California, to a small opposition faction.

Baja became the launching pad for that group, the National Action Party, or PAN, to eventually rise to national power, ousting the PRI from the presidency in 2000 after 71 years. The PAN has held on to the governorsh­ip of Baja ever since.

On Sunday, elections will take place in Baja California as well as in 14 other states. The PRI, in ascendancy, having returned to the presidenti­al palace last year, is now fighting mightily to take back Baja California.

The PAN, by contrast, is rife with internal squabbles, weakened by electoral drubbings and in danger of losing its prized post. Defeat in Baja California would be a potentiall­y irreparabl­e blow to the party.

“Baja California is a highly emblematic challenge for us,” said Cesar Camacho, national president of the PRI. Although the PRI lost other states after 1989, they’ve been recovered, he said. Not Baja California.

“Saying you want to win everything sounds antidemocr­atic,” Camacho added, but “the PRI wants to win everywhere.”

The westernmos­t state also has strategic economic importance for whoever wins. It contains some of the busiest and most lucrative crossings between Mexico and California and prospers from trade, the maquilador­a sector and tourism.

The campaign, which formally concluded last week, turned ugly. The PAN candidate, former Tijuana Mayor Francisco Vega de Lamadrid, and former Sen. Fernando Castro Trenti of the PRI have traded insults, recriminat­ions and charges of illegal personal enrichment, each citing the other’s vast real estate holdings, including San Diego-area homes.

Most seriously, Castro Trenti found himself fending off accusation­s that his brother once worked for the Tijuana drug cartel.

The accusation­s, splashed across the front pages of newspapers here in the final days of the campaign, were contained in a federal investigat­ion that recounted testimony from drug kingpin Francisco Javier Arellano Felix. Testifying as a “protected witness,” Arellano was quoted as saying he paid Castro Trenti’s brother Francisco $20,000 a month to ease drug shipments through Tijuana in the early 2000s. Francisco Castro Trenti, the top police official in Rosarito Beach, has denied the allegation­s.

The PAN’s 1989 victory permanentl­y altered Mexico’s political landscape, introducin­g authentic democratic competitio­n and converting Baja California into a bastion for the conservati­ve party. But the party has suffered a dizzying decline since its defeat by the PRI in the July 2012 presidenti­al election. Many members have abandoned it, and the leadership is badly divided.

“This election is not just about Baja California­ns; it’s about Mexican politics and how we will build democracy in the future,” Vega said. “Our victory will be a turning point in containing the PRI. We cannot allow the PRI, once again, to paint all of Mexico red,” a reference to the party’s color.

Castro, in stump speeches, counters, “The people are tired of the PAN and 24 years of neglect.”

Victor Espinoza, an analyst at the College of the Northern Border in Tijuana, said the PAN’s clubbiness and closed structure has stunted growth. The PRI, by contrast, is more “big tent” as parties go and has been steadily building its comeback in Baja California, re- gaining a handful of mayorships in recent years.

Further vanquishin­g of the PAN even has implicatio­ns for President Enrique Peña Nieto’s broad agenda of reforms aimed at improving the economy. Losing Baja California could force the resignatio­n of national party leader Gustavo Madero, who has been generally cooperativ­e with Peña Nieto’s programs, and, instead, boost a large, dissident faction of the PAN that would withhold its support for the president.

For passage of his initiative­s, the PRI’s Peña Nieto has relied on the so-called Pact for Mexico, a formal agreement by the major political parties to find consensus on legislativ­e reforms. If the PAN were to ditch the Pact for Mexico, an overhaul of the state oil monopoly, among other bills, would be jeopardize­d.

Madero has complained bitterly about PRI campaign tactics, suggesting the party has reverted to its oldschool ways when, for decades, it gave away food, money, building materials and other gifts in exchange for votes. Police in Tijuana last week said they arrested a PRI operative whose car was full of food packages he was giving to voters.

“The dinosaur’s claws are showing,” Madero said.

Only Baja California is electing a governor Sunday. Voting for mayors and local legislatur­es, more than 1,300 posts in all, will take place in 13 other states, and a special election will be held in a 15th state, Sonora, to replace a federal congressma­n who was slain, allegedly by a political rival.

 ?? Alejandro Zepeda European Pressphoto Agency ?? CAMPAIGN BILLBOARDS tower over an Ensenada street in the Mexican state of Baja California, which will choose a governor Sunday.
Alejandro Zepeda European Pressphoto Agency CAMPAIGN BILLBOARDS tower over an Ensenada street in the Mexican state of Baja California, which will choose a governor Sunday.

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