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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Mexico recount will be limited


People protest outside the Federal Electoral Tribunal in Mexico City on Saturday. Mexico's top electoral court on Saturday rejected a ballot-by-ballot recount in the disputed presidential election. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By Colin McMahon Chicago Tribune

MEXICO CITY – Rejecting the principal demand of leftist candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, Mexico’s highest electoral court on Saturday ordered only a limited recount of votes in the disputed July 2 race for president.

Reaction was fierce and swift. Outside the tribunal building, Lopez Obrador supporters called the judges “rats,” “traitors” and “sell-outs.” They vowed to expand protests that have paralyzed downtown Mexico City. And one party leader warned the tenor of the demonstrations might change.

“We have been peaceful, but now there is a risk,” said Emilio Serrano Jimenez, a Mexico City congressman from the Democratic Revolutionary Party. “This is putting in jeopardy the peaceful stability of the country.”

Lopez Obrador narrowly lost to the conservative Felipe Calderon in a bitter, expensive election that exposed Mexico’s deep ideological and regional differences.

But the popular ex-mayor of Mexico City refused to accept the official results, charging that fraud, conspiracies and mistakes gave Calderon the victory.

Both candidates appealed to the seven electoral judges, who are the highest paid public servants in Mexico and whose decisions cannot be appealed.

Lopez Obrador sought a recount, “vote by vote, precinct by precinct.” Calderon asked the court to confirm his victory.

Instead, the court unanimously found ground in-between.

It rejected the arguments of Lopez Obrador’s coalition that every ballot box in all 300 electoral districts must be opened and reviewed because the whole election was tainted by, among other things, favoritism on the part of federal authorities.

The court decided instead that it would look only at those districts in which specific challenges were made. It reviewed those complaints, the judges said, and decided they were valid enough to warrant a recount in 149 electoral districts spread out across all but six states.

While Lopez Obrador’s lawyers argued that they had documented irregularities in more than half of Mexico’s 130,000 precincts, the court ordered a recount in fewer than 12,000.

“I am absolutely in favor of this decision,” said Luis Felipe Cruz Lesbros, a citizen electoral monitor from the state of Queretaro who came to hear the court’s ruling Saturday. “The judges are correcting the errors that were made, in those cases where there were challenges. And errors were made.”

The court did not specify how many ballots would be at stake. But if turnout at the targeted precincts was in line with turnout elsewhere, nearly 3.8 million votes might be recounted.

Calderon won by fewer than 244,000 votes out of nearly 42 million cast, according to official figures.