Monday, July 10, 2006

Five lessons from the Mexican elections via Andres Oppenheimer

Columnist Andres Oppenheimer gives his five lessons from last week’s Mexican presidential elections including the need for a runoff vote and the possibility of Mexico City’s mayor-elect to be the PRD's presidential candidate in 2012. (Compare Oppenheimer’s five points to those by Bloggings by Boz as mentioned in this post).

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think Oppenheimer's points are all valid and also believe that a run-off might help strengthen the position of a candidate in a true multi-party system such as has evolved in Mexico over the past two elections. For now, I am hopeful that the protests which Obrador is calling for will be focused on the demand that the fairness of the election results be justly tested through the established process and not turn into minority protests over the ultimate result arrived at through that process. As discussed in a post on the Going Global blog after returning from the past week in Mexico, the people I spoke with seemed confidant that the process would work -- and it was encouraging to get the sense the people believe that the election belonged to them whichever candidate is ultimately declared the winner.

I have found your blog immensely insightful and have recommended it to my readers at Going Global. Keep up the great work.

Erwin C. said...

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Erwin C. said...

Gracias Ricardo!