San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

LÓPEZ OBRADOR IS BIGGEST PROMOTER OF RECALL VOTE

President urges Mexicans to show support for him

- BY NATALIE KITROEFF Kitroeff writes for The New York Times.

Strolling through Mexico’s capital these days, it would be easy to assume the country’s president is at imminent risk of losing his job.

City streets are littered with signs, flyers and billboards urging Mexicans to vote on whether to remove President Andrés Manuel López Obrador from office in a recall election today.

Only it isn’t the opposition telling people to rush to the polls. It’s the president’s loyalists.

“Support President López Obrador,” reads one flyer. “If you don’t participat­e, the corrupt ones will take away the scholarshi­ps, assistance and pensions that we receive today.”

López Obrador has called the recall “an exercise in democracy,” but critics say it actually amounts to something far more cynical: an effort to bolster the president’s claim to power — and a tool to undermine his detractors.

Opposition leaders have told their followers to boycott the exercise, and analysts believe turnout could be too low for the results to even count.

The vote’s most enthusiast­ic promoter — and the person most keen on putting the president’s wellestabl­ished popularity to the test — has been the president himself. López Obrador proposed the recall, the first of its kind in Mexico, and analysts say he will use it to manufactur­e a political victory even if participat­ion is low.

“This is supposed to be a mechanism for civic control of power, but it has become instead an instrument of political propaganda,” said Carlos Bravo Regidor, a political analyst and critic of the administra­tion. The governing party, Bravo Regidor said, “wants this to be a show of force, of muscle, and capacity to bring people into the streets and make explicit their support for López Obrador.”

On a balmy Monday in Mexico City, volunteers in the president’s camp fanned out across a residentia­l neighborho­od armed with flyers and wide grins, cheerfully advertisin­g nearby polling stations and telling anyone who would listen to go vote in the recall.

Allan Pozos, one of the group’s leaders, said he hoped the exercise would “set a precedent” so future leaders could be kicked out if needed. This time, though, he just wants the president to know he is loved.

“It’s to show Andrés Manuel that he has the strong backing of the people,” Pozos said. “Andrés often feels alone, because he has to go against an entire system and doesn’t have support.”

Such a show of support could not come at a better time for the president, who has passed the midpoint of his term while struggling to deliver on key campaign promises that swept him into office in a landslide victory in 2018, when he proposed this type of referendum. He vowed a “transforma­tion” of the country that would drive down poverty, jump-start the economy and tackle endemic violence at its roots.

But after a pandemic and a global recession, poverty rates remain stubbornly high, economic growth is anemic and homicides are still hovering near record levels.

However, López Obrador has remained very popular, with more than half of Mexicans approving of his performanc­e, polls show. His government has sought to improve the lot of the poor, raising the minimum wage four times and boosting welfare spending.

López Obrador has also won points with symbolic gestures, like turning the presidenti­al mansion into a museum open to the public, and flying commercial, even when visiting the United States.

His high favor with voters is also a tribute, supporters and critics agree, to his relentless broadcasti­ng of an official narrative in which he portrays himself as a lone warrior for the people, going up against a corrupt establishm­ent.

“The results have been below the expectatio­ns of the government itself,” Jorge Zepeda Patterson, a prominent Mexican columnist who has supported the president, said, referring to López Obrador’s achievemen­ts during his tenure.

“Polarizati­on is very profitable politicall­y, especially if you don’t have results,” said Zepeda Patterson, adding, “at least you can build the narrative that you are fighting.”

The main risk of the recall for the president is the possibilit­y that large swaths of the country just ignore the exercise altogether, especially as it takes place on Palm Sunday.

By law, for the vote to become binding, at least 37 million Mexicans, 40 percent of the electorate, need to participat­e in it — significan­tly more than the number of people who voted for the president in the 2018 elections that swept him into office in a landslide.

But López Obrador has already identified a scapegoat in case of low turnout: the country’s electoral watchdog.

For months, he has been attacking the National Electoral Institute over what he sees as a failure to dedicate enough resources to advertisin­g and administer­ing the recall vote.

“They should have promoted the referendum from the start, not acted dishonestl­y, keeping silent, not promoting the vote so that people wouldn’t know about it, putting polling booths as far away as possible,” the president said at a recent news conference, referring to the electoral institute. “They’re openly against us, against me.”

The institute asked the federal government for more money to oversee the contest, to little avail. With only about half the budget it said it needed, the watchdog installed about a third of the polling stations it would in a normal election.

Lorenzo Córdova, leader of the electoral institute, known by its Spanish acronym INE, said he is being set up to fail.

“It’s not just the president,” Córdova said, “there is an orchestrat­ed, systematic and well-designed campaign to discredit the INE.” The point, he said, is to “damage the referee, and eventually pave the way for its political capture.”

The nation’s Supreme Court has said political parties cannot advertise the recall, and yet, López Obrador’s face has cropped up on signs around the country.

Córdova says the electoral institute has not determined who is paying for all of the ads, but said there are at least twice as many of them in states where the president’s party will compete in elections for governor in June.

“It makes you suspect there’s political intentiona­lity,” behind the marketing campaign, Córdova said.

There are, of course, strategic benefits that could come from asking the country to weigh in on whether they like the president at this particular moment. López Obrador founded his political party and has an obvious interest in doing everything possible to ensure its victory in general elections to replace him in 2024.

The voting patterns in the recall will tell the president where his side’s weaknesses are — and which of the potential candidates for president can get people to the polls.

“It’s a kind of experiment, a rehearsal,” said Blanca Heredia, a professor at CIDE, a Mexico City research institutio­n. “Looking ahead to 2024, he can measure the capacity of his operators to mobilize the vote.”

Whatever happens today, for many in Mexico, it is hard to see how the country’s first-ever presidenti­al recall will seriously damage this president.

“Andrés Manuel has this thing where even when he loses, he wins,” Heredia said. “He always has a way of turning a defeat into a triumph.”

 ?? ALEJANDRO CEGARRA NYT ?? Posters of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador are seen alongside a highway in Mexico City. A recall election, proposed by López Obrador, will be held today.
ALEJANDRO CEGARRA NYT Posters of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador are seen alongside a highway in Mexico City. A recall election, proposed by López Obrador, will be held today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States