Los Angeles Times

Mexico leader proposes electoral reforms

Plan would downsize Congress and state legislatur­es and let voters choose board overseeing balloting.

- Associated press

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s government on Thursday proposed a dramatic overhaul of the nation’s electoral system and the agency that oversees it — one of the country’s most trusted institutio­ns. It would reduce the size of Congress and state legislatur­es while having the federal elections board chosen by voters, potentiall­y adding a higher degree of politics to what has been an independen­t body.

The proposal also would reduce federal funding of political parties and spending on elections in general — a repeated target of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who has often feuded with the National Electoral Institute.

The proposals presented by López Obrador and several members of his Cabinet would create a new federal elections authority to replace the institute, as well as eliminatin­g similar statelevel bodies.

“There is no intention of imposing a single party,” López Obrador said. “What we want is that there is a true democracy in the country and that electoral frauds end ... to leave a true democratic state establishe­d.”

But the path for what will surely be a controvers­ial reform package would be difficult. López Obrador’s party and its allies do not have the two-thirds majority in Congress required to make constituti­onal changes. The main opposition parties have already said they oppose such changes.

Another major constituti­onal reform proposed by the president, to shake up the energy sector, fell well short of the votes needed last week.

López Obrador appeared to acknowledg­e that the proposed reforms are unlikely to pass. He called on Congress to study each element of the proposal, make the public aware and then decide. He said it was his responsibi­lity to present it “even if it’s not approved.”

López Obrador has spent decades battling electoral authoritie­s. He considers himself a victim of electoral fraud on multiple occasions, though it was the National Electoral Institute that confirmed his landslide presidenti­al victory in 2018.

The proposals would reduce the number of legislator­s in the lower chamber of Congress to 300 from 500 and senators to 96 from 128 by eliminatin­g at-large lawmakers. Those are not directly elected by voters, but appear on party lists and get seats based on their party’s proportion of the vote.

Political parties would receive public funding only during campaigns rather than yearly, as now. Rules against officials and agencies promoting their programs during campaign seasons would be eased. Currently, even many government websites are inactivate­d during campaigns.

López Obrador’s administra­tion argues that the changes would save Mexico $1.2 billion and allow citizens to select honest people to run elections.

The idea of a popular vote for election officials has been panned before by academics who argue that the people in those positions must be experts and who say it could lead to political bias in the way elections are run.

“To think that an electorate so varied and so uninformed would have the ability to select electoral council members and magistrate­s is pure demagogy and pretense,” said Clara Jusidman, founder of the nongovernm­ental organizati­on Citizen Initiative and Social Developmen­t. She said those in power would steer their supporters to vote for whom they wanted.

Several of the proposals would undo or loosen reforms that helped Mexico break free of the single-party domination that lasted from 1929 to 2000.

The at-large legislator­s were created to give smaller parties representa­tion in Congress — initially largely symbolic — at a time when the Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party, or PRI, had an iron grip on elections and rarely recognized any opposition victories.

The independen­t electoral agency was created by a series of reforms in the 1990s after public outcry over alleged fraud in the 1988 presidenti­al election, which — like earlier votes — had been run by the federal Interior Department.

That helped lead to an opposition party victory in the 2000 presidenti­al election.

 ?? PRESIDENT Marco Ugarte Associated Press ?? Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s plan to overhaul Mexico’s electoral system faces an uphill challenge, but he urged Congress to study the proposal.
PRESIDENT Marco Ugarte Associated Press Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s plan to overhaul Mexico’s electoral system faces an uphill challenge, but he urged Congress to study the proposal.

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