Los Angeles Times

Tortillas join Mexico’s election gift list

Protests have ensued over the use of the discounted food staple in the campaign to woo voters this year.

- By Kate Linthicum

NEZAHUALCO­YOTL, Mexico — It’s election season in Mexico, which means the high jinks have begun.

Vote buying, illegal spending and other forms of cheating are so common here that major political parties sometimes reference the phenomenon in their slogans (“Take what the others give, but vote National Action Party!”). Past candidates have been caught wooing voters with handouts of gift cards, eyeglasses, building supplies and even washing machines.

This year, in a rough-andtumble suburb of Mexico City, it’s all about tortillas.

In Nezahualco­yotl, a working-class city of 1 million, several dozen tortilleri­as associated with a leftleanin­g political party have been selling corn tortillas for half the normal price. On the weekends, many have been selling nearly 4 pounds of tortillas for the price of about 2 pounds — in exchange for the buyer’s name and contact informatio­n.

The rest of the city’s tortilla makers are incensed. They say the party is trying to illegally win over voters and hurting their business at the same time.

“It’s impossible for us to compete with this situation,” said Sergio Jarquin Muñoz, a hearty man who owns three tortilleri­as in “Neza,” as Nezahualco­yotl is known.

It was a cool weekday morning at Jarquin’s small tortilla factory, and his workers were pulling perfect disks off a silver conveyor belt. “It’s not fair,” he said, passing a hunk of masa ,or corn dough, between his hands like worry beads. He said declining profits have already forced him to let go three employees.

In recent months, Jarquin and other tortilleri­a owners have spoken out about what they see as unfair competitio­n, organizing protests and toting signs that warn: “Nezahualco­yotl’s tortilla industry is at risk of bankruptcy!”

The man Jarquin blames for it all is Armando Soto, a congressma­n from the leftleanin­g Party of the Democratic Revolution, or PRD, who is running for mayor of Neza in the July 1 election. It’s a crowded ballot; voters will also choose new members of Congress as well as a new president.

Soto’s name and picture are featured on large banners hanging outside some of the shops offering discount tortillas, along with the phrase: “2018 — let’s do it better.” The shops are painted yellow and black — PRD colors — and bear the party’s logo of a rising sun.

Soto insists he is not paying the stores to sell cheaper tortillas and advertise on his behalf. He said he would never try to win over voters with something as basic as a tortilla.

“You don’t play with hunger,” he said.

But the owner of the stores selling discount tortillas, Roberto Samano, said a foundation Soto helped create has been providing the tortilleri­as with support, including upgrading and maintainin­g equipment. Samano said he is able to offer such cheap prices because he is getting the help, because he buys ingredient­s in bulk, and because he is content making profits of centavos, instead of pesos, on every 2 pounds of tortillas he sells.

“This has always been a project aimed at helping people who have less,” he said.

Whether the the tortilla program is illegal all comes down to whether the discount tortilleri­as are designed to influence voters on Soto’s behalf.

Under Mexican election law, political parties and politician­s are allowed to give voters gifts as long as the gift is not meant to influence their votes. The cost of such gifts must be reported to election authoritie­s and can’t exceed campaign spending limits.

Polling done by University of Texas professor Kenneth Greene, who researches Mexican elections, found that 21% of Mexicans were approached with an offer to buy their vote in the 2012 presidenti­al election.

“I think the practice is increasing,” he said.

Greene said the pressure to hand out things to voters often comes from the ground up, in part because voters are disappoint­ed with elected officials’ performanc­e in office.

“Nobody has been able to seriously deliver,” he said, so “people have been asking for stuff. People say, ‘What are you gonna give me?’ ”

The government has created several mechanisms to check vote buying and other illegal election tactics, even creating a special prosecutor for electoral crimes. But violations of those rules usually incur fines and in the past have not been considered grounds for annulling elections.

Internatio­nal observers are worried about the possibilit­y of vote buying and other fraud in the highly contested presidenti­al election, in which President Enrique Peña Nieto’s Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party, or PRI, is going up against several opposition parties, as well as at least three independen­t candidates. Peña Nieto fired the electoral prosecutor last fall after he spoke out about an ongoing bribery investigat­ion related to the PRI.

Back in Neza, tortilla makers say they don’t care whether the tortilla program is legal, they just want it to stop.

“They’re playing dirty,” said Sophia Cruz, who owns a corner store called Tortilleri­a Mexico. She has refused to lower prices for her airy, delicate tortillas, which are famous in these parts. On market days, when street vendors sell their wares on her street, she used to have a line down the block. Now customers come only every few minutes.

It was already a hard time for tortilla makers because of hikes in gas and electricit­y prices, she said. They’ve also had to compete with the changing diets of Mexicans, who are increasing­ly choosing foods such as pizza, hamburgers and sushi.

Although the going rate for tortillas is about 75 cents for about 2 pounds, the discounted stores have been selling them for as little as 37 cents instead.

That may not sound like a huge cost difference to some, but it is to many in Mexico, where the minimum wage is about $4.70 a day.

Customer Cyntia Carina Hernandez Contas, 29, said she had tried the discounted tortillas. She wasn’t turned off by the political connection­s — she’s used to parties trying to woo her with giveaways — but she didn’t like the taste. She said she has remained loyal to Cruz’s tortillas even if they cost twice as much.

“They’re thinner than the others,” she said. “It’s worth it.”

kate.linthicum @latimes.com Twitter: @katelinthi­cum Cecilia Sanchez in The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Kate Linthicum Los Angeles Times ?? SOPHIA CRUZ, who owns a corner store called Tortilleri­a Mexico, is among those whose profits have taken a hit from the sale of discounted tortillas.
Kate Linthicum Los Angeles Times SOPHIA CRUZ, who owns a corner store called Tortilleri­a Mexico, is among those whose profits have taken a hit from the sale of discounted tortillas.

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