Los Angeles Times

Brutal campaign season in Mexico

Along with claims of ties to cartels and pedophilia, a head reportedly turns up at a polling station.

- Election day in Mexico

Voters will choose 12 governors and hundreds of local lawmakers as the ruling party tries to maintain its dominance.

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s ruling party is seeking to consolidat­e its dominance while opposition blocs on the left and right are hoping for gains as Mexicans go to the polls Sunday in state and local balloting.

Voters will be choosing governors in 12 of the nation’s 32 states, along with hundreds of mayors and local lawmakers across the country.

The elections are widely seen as important indicators for the presidenti­al elections of 2018, when the ruling Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party will probably face a tough challenge to extend its hold on the reins of power.

The contentiou­s run-up to the elections in several key states has featured rough-and-tumble bouts of name calling, leaks of tapped telephone conversati­ons and allegation­s that some candidates are linked to drug traffickin­g cartels.

There have been scattered reports of preelectio­n violence as authoritie­s beefed up security for the vote.

The nastiest electionee­ring has been in the southern state of Veracruz, where a pair of cousins is facing off for the governor’s seat amid allegation­s of pedophilia, illgotten riches and secret deals, among other asserted bouts of skulldugge­ry.

On Saturday, the Mexican press reported that a human head was found in front of a school that will serve as a polling place Sunday in a town in Veracruz state. Molotov cocktails and bullets targeted buildings associated with several opposition figures in the state, the press reported, but no serious injuries resulted.

Overall, Sunday’s contests involve 14 states — two of which are not electing governors — that are home to slightly less than one-third of the Mexican population. Voters in Mexico City are electing members of an assembly to write a new constituti­on for the capital.

The ruling party, known as the PRI, holds the governor’s seats in nine of the 12 states that are choosing new chief executives. Key losses on Sunday could weaken the party’s positionin­g for presidenti­al balloting two years from now, analysts say.

“The elections of tomorrow are an opener for 2018,” said Lorenzo Mayer, a longtime political analyst here. “What’s in play is 2018.”

Among the closestwat­ched races are gubernator­ial contests in a pair of violence-plagued gulf states — Veracruz, an oil-producing hub that is also rife with corruption, crime and drugtraffi­cking; and Tamaulipas, a smuggling corridor and organized crime bastion along the Texas portion of the U.S. border.

Tamaulipas and Veracruz have been historic stronghold­s of the PRI, which has ruled both since the post-revolution­ary era in the early 20th century. The PRI’s robust electoral machinery and unrivaled ability to lure masses of voters with promises of gifts, money and jobs make it a formidable foe.

However, widespread discontent with a sluggish economy, rampant corruption and unchecked violence has chipped away at the PRI’s once-monolithic status. The party’s current standard-bearer, President Enrique Peña Nieto, now more than halfway through his six-year term, is battling falling approval ratings.

Current polls show opposition gubernator­ial aspirants making strong runs in Tamaulipas and Veracruz.

In Veracruz, outgoing incumbent Gov. Javier Duarte, a PRI stalwart, has been widely accused of mismanagem­ent, corruption and failure to curb violence. A least 15 journalist­s have been slain in Veracruz during Duarte’s term. He is widely unpopular, the embodiment of the worst of the PRI’s retrograde “dinosaur” wing to his many critics.

The incumbent’s tattered image has complicate­d matters for the PRI’s current gubernator­ial candidate, Hector Yunes Landa, the ruling party’s designated successor to Duarte. The candidate has fought off allegation­s that he has made a secret pact not to prosecute the current governor or his cronies if he is elected.

Yunes Landa has gone on the offensive against his chief rival — his cousin, Miguel Angel Yunes Linares, candidate of an alliance of convenienc­e of the National Action Party, or PAN, and the left-wing Democratic Revolution Party.

The PRI candidate publicly accused Yunes Linares of being a “pervert” and a “sexual deviant,” citing alleged complicity in a child pornograph­y network. He has denied the various charges and painted the invective as desperate rulingpart­y smears.

“This is about the most disgusting dirty war that has been mounted against anyone in this country,” Yunes Linares said during a news conference.

Polls have shown a tight three-way race in Veracruz involving the Yunes cousins and a sleeper candidate, Cuitlahuac Garcia, of the National Regenerati­on Movement, a relatively new leftist party known by its Spanish acronym, Morena.

Morena is the project of one of Mexico’s best-known opposition political actors — Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, former Mexico City mayor and twice-defeated presidenti­al candidate. A victory or even a strong challenge by Morena candidates in Veracruz and elsewhere, analysts say, could be a boost to an expected 2018 Lopez Obrador presidenti­al bid as the vanguard of the left.

In Tamaulipas, which has won notoriety as Mexico’s kidnapping capital and home turf for the Gulf cartel and the Zetas traffickin­g gang, allegation­s of various candidates’ links to drug traffickin­g have been a major theme.

Connection­s between politician­s and trafficker­s have long been an issue in Tamaulipas. A pair of former governors are fugitives from U.S. money-laundering charges.

Just days before the voting in the last gubernator­ial election, the ruling-party candidate and front-runner was shot dead by masked gunmen, a killing attributed to the Gulf cartel.

Recently, Tamaulipas made headlines when a star Mexican soccer player, Alan Pulido, was kidnapped after going to a club in Ciudad Victoria. He was freed within 24 hours when he managed to secure a cellphone from one of his captors and call police, authoritie­s said.

The unusual circumstan­ces — kidnapping­s seldom have such quick and felicitous endings in Mexico — led some analysts to suggest the episode was a preelectio­n political setup.

Polls show Tamaulipas as a tight two-man race in which the PAN hopeful, Francisco Garcia Cabeza de Vaca, a senator and former mayor of the border town of Reynosa, is running close to his PRI rival, Baltazar Hinojosa. Each candidate has accused the other of being in cahoots with the cartels.

 ?? Eduardo Verdugo Associated Press ?? HECTOR YUNES LANDA, the Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party candidate for governor of the Mexican state of Veracruz, greets supporters in Cosoleacaq­ue.
Eduardo Verdugo Associated Press HECTOR YUNES LANDA, the Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party candidate for governor of the Mexican state of Veracruz, greets supporters in Cosoleacaq­ue.

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