Los Angeles Times

Many candidates but few likely voters in Tijuana

- By Sandra Dibble

It’s an election with 12 mayoral contenders — an unpreceden­ted array of choices for Tijuana’s 1.27 million eligible voters — and for the first time in the city’s history, a lineup that includes independen­t candidates.

But here’s the big question: How many people will take the trouble to vote in Sunday’s midterm election in Tijuana, a city that once was at the vanguard of political change in Mexico?

Baja California more than two decades ago was known for its record voter participat­ion rates, and it was the first Mexican state to break the six-decade grip of Mexico’s Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party, the PRI. But in recent years, most eligible voters have stayed away from the polls. In Tijuana, only about 3 out of 10 registered voters have been casting ballots.

The low turnout is rooted in several factors, including the high mobility of Tijuana’s population, but also a growing disenchant­ment with the political process, analysts say.

Whatever the reasons, it’s a phenomenon that supports the status quo, they say, one that favors the dominance of Mexico’s two main political parties: Mexico’s ruling PRI and the National Action Party, PAN, which has not lost a gubernator­ial election in Baja California since 1989.

“The system is very smart in working for itself,” said Gaston Luken, one of two independen­t candidates on the ballot. “We want to break the system.”

Across Tijuana on Wednesday evening, a lastminute frenzy enveloped the main boulevards as the state’s campaign season came to a close. Flags fluttered from taxis and sidewalks were lined with party faithful until midnight, when a three-day mandatory lull went into effect.

While voters in 12 other Mexican states prepare for gubernator­ial contests Sunday, members of Baja California’s electorate are getting set to choose five new mayors and replace the 25member legislatur­e.

The first independen­t mayoral candidates in Tijuana’s history, Luken and Carolina Aubanel, are not the only ones who are challengin­g the dominance of the PRI and PAN.

The contenders include Julian Leyzaola Perez, the city’s former hard-line police chief who made a name for himself fighting drug trafficker­s. Leyzaola is running on an anti-corruption platform as a candidate for Partido de Encuentro Social, a small, socially conservati­ve party linked to the evangelica­l Christian movement.

Yet independen­t polls have been giving slim possibilit­ies of victory to anyone but the PRI and the PAN.

The latest numbers from the website Plural Mx put the PRI candidate, Rene Mendivil, with just over 22%, followed by PAN candidate Juan Manuel Gastelum with nearly 21%. In third place with 14.2% is Leyzaola.

Key for both the PRI and the PAN is the support of loyal party faithful — known as “el voto duro” — those who can be counted on to turn out on election day.

“The parties’ voto duro is not that large,” said Benedicto Ruíz Vargas, a political analyst and columnist for the Tijuana newspaper Frontera. “It’s big because people don’t vote.”

But if independen­t candidates have prevailed in other Mexican states, the candidacie­s have not generated a large following in Tijuana, Ruiz said.

“This idea that there is great discontent with the parties that favors independen­ts, well, we’re seeing that it’s not so,” he said. “There is great discontent with the parties, but they’re also mistrustfu­l of the independen­ts.”

The challenger­s say they are not so much looking to take votes away from the two parties as reach out to those who have refrained from voting.

For those who vote — and those who don’t — the campaign has brought up a host of municipal issues of concern to city residents, including the need for more schools, higher salaries, better trash collection, paved streets, more street lighting and stronger efforts against crime and corruption.

“We want a clean city, with paved streets, one in which you and I are firstclass citizens,” Gastelum, a former state and federal legislator, told a sea of f lag-waving PAN supporters from all corners of the city.

At the PRI’s closing rally, thousands of supporters bused in from all corners of the city converged in the parking lot of the Caliente Stadium. A mariachi group sang lyrics extolling the virtues of Mendivil, a longtime politician who headed the PRI statewide and has served in the state and federal legislatur­es.

Four days before the election, Adrian Diaz, a 24-yearold taco-stand worker from eastern Tijuana, said he was thinking about voting for the first time.

“Maybe, if those who don’t vote decided to vote, maybe there could be a change,” he said.

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