2021 Mexican local elections
Local elections were held in Mexico on June 6, 2021. Local elections were held for thirty state congresses, 1,900 town halls (ayuntamientos or municipalities), Mexico City borough mayors, municipal boards and municipal presidents.[1] Fifteen gubernatorial elections and federal legislative elections will be held the same day.
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Governors of 25 states and Mexico City signed an agreement with President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) to stay neutral during the elections, to allow the free will of the people, to reject money from organized crime, and to refrain from using official funds to support any particular candidates or parties.[2]
The Instituto Nacional Electoral (INE) canceled 49 candidates affiliated with MORENA for failing to report expenses related to their pre-electoral campaigns. The party was fined MXN $6,714,893.30. Two gubernatorial, 25 federal deputies, six local deputies, 12 municipal presidents, and four borough president candidates were affected. Two candidates for federal deputy and one for governor of Michoacan from the Michoacán a Redes Sociales Progresistas were also withdrawn. Fines were imposed on
PRD (MXN $409,031),
MC ($227,886), independents ($182,361),
PES ($98,782), Redes Sociales Progresistas ($85,229),
PAN ($26,845), and
PVEM ($1,476).[3]
The INE said that 300 polling places could not be installed in Chiapas, Michoacán or Oaxaca on June 6 due to social conditions that make voting dangerous or impossible.[4]
States
Aguascalientes
27 deputies, 11 municipalities[1]
Baja California
Governor, 25 deputies, 5 municipalities[1]
Nearly all the current member of the Congress of Baja California are seeking reelection. Five have been granted leave to seek other positions:[5]
- Marina del Pilar Ávila Olmeda (Juntos Haremos Historia
MORENA) was declared the winner with 48.1% of the vote.[6]
- Miguel Ángel Bujanda, Independent (formerly
PAN)
- Gerardo López
PRD
- David Ruvalcaba
PRI
Municipal president:
- Mexicali Municipality – Norma Bustamante
MORENA[6]
- Tijuana Municipality – 2021 Tijuana Elections -
MORENA[6] Montserrat Cabellero Ramirez won 48.45% of the vote in Tijuana city.
Baja California Sur
Governor, 21 deputies, 5 municipalities[1]
Governor:
Víctor Manuel Castro Cosío, MORENA[6]
Campeche
Governor, 25 deputies, 13 municipalities, 22 municipal juntas[1]
Governor: Layda Elena Sansores, MORENA[6]
List of presidents of Campeche Municipality: Biby Karen Rabelo,
MC[6]
Chiapas
40 deputies, 124 municipalities[1]
Mayoral candidates:
- Comitán – Constantino Kánter
MORENA, former mayor of Comitán (
PRI, 2005–2007). Kanter is known for supporting ranchers and landowners against indigenous rights and against the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) during the 1994 uprising.[7]
Chihuahua
Governor, 33 deputies, 67 municipalities, 67 municipality receiverships[1]
Governor of Chihuahua: María Eugenia Campos Galván PAN[6]
Mayors:
- Ciudad Juárez – Cruz Pérez Cuéllar
MORENA, former state president of
PAN and candidate for governor in 2016
MC[8] Winner.[6]
- Nuevo Casas Grandes – Yuriel Armando González Lara (
PRI); assassinated on March 4, 2021.[9]
Coahuila
38 municipalities[1]
Colima
Governor, 25 deputies, 10 municipalities[1]
Durango
25 deputies[1]
Guanajuato
36 deputies, 46 municipalities[1]
Mayors:
- León – Ricardo Sheffield (
MORENA), former mayor of León (
PAN 2009–2012) and candidate for governor in 2018(
MORENA)[8]
Alderman:
- Apaseo el Grande: – Alejandro Galicia Juárez
PRD, murdered on March 31, 2021. Mayor Juan Ignacio de la Cruz Ávila is seriously injured.[10]
Guerrero
Governor, 46 deputies, 80 municipalities[1]
List of governors of Guerrero: Evelyn Salgado MORENA was declared the winner with 44% of the vote.[6]
PRI and
PRD called for a recount.[11]
Mayoral candidates:
Acapulco (municipality): Abelina López MORENA[6]
Hidalgo
30 deputies[1]
Jalisco
38 deputies, 125 municipalities[1]
Mayors:
- Guadalajara – Ismael del Toro
MC (incumbent)[12] Winner of the 2021 Guadalajara municipal election.[6]
- Zapopan-In the poll prior to the election, Zapopan had a technical tie since Juan José Frangie Saade from the party Movimiento Ciudadano had 30.8% while Alberto Uribe Camacho from National Regeneration Movement (Movimiento de Regeneración Nacional,
MORENA MORENA) had 28.3%. The candidate Juan José Frangie Saade from the party Movimiento Ciudadano won the election with 46% of the votes. In Zapopan, the third place in the election was won by Pedro Kumamoto from the party Futuro; a local political party from Jalisco that started as a social movement in 2013 and became a political party in 2020.
- Tlajomulco de Zúñiga- The poll before the election showed that Salvador Zamora Zamora from the party Movimiento Ciudadano had 35.1% of the votes, while Marcela Michel from National Regeneration Movement (Movimiento de Regeneración Nacional,
MORENA MORENA) was in second place with 27.1%. Salvador Zamora Zamora from party Movimiento Ciudadano won the election, but he only got 17% of the votes. This means that he will be ruling with about 83% of the population in opposition.
- Puerto Vallarta-In Puerto Vallarta, the polls were very close since Luis Michel from the party National Regeneration Movement (Movimiento de Regeneración Nacional,
MORENA MORENA) had 33% of the votes, while Luis Ernesto Munguia of the Ecologist Green Party of Mexico (Partido Verde Ecologista de México,
PVEM) had 27.2%. In the election, Luis Michel is in first place with 32% of the votes, Maria Guadalupe Guerrero from the party Movimiento Ciudadano is in second place with 29%, and Luis Ernesto Munguia in third place with 26%.
For the Congress of Jalisco, 38 deputies will be chosen. To choose the deputies, the state is divided into 20 districts, of which 1 deputy will be chosen from each district using simple majority, and the other 18 deputies will be chosen using proportional representation. The party Movimiento Ciudadano won in 7 districts; Juntos Hacemos Historia which is the coalition of the MORENA,
PT,
PVEM won in 7 districts; and the coalition between
PAN,
PRI, and the
PRD won in 6 districts.
Michoacán
Governor, 40 deputies, 112 municipalities[1]
Organized crime and indigenous groups block the installion of 100 of the 6,251 polling places in the state. A man was killed in Buenavista on June 6 in what appears to be a territorial dispute between drug cartels and not election-related.[13]
Governor of Michoacán: Alfredo Ramirez Bedolla (MRN party) was declared the winner with 41.5% of the vote. Carlos Herrera Tello ( PRD) was second with 39%.[6]
Mexico City
66 deputies and 16 borough mayors (alcaldias):[1]
The Va por México coalition of PAN,
PRI,
PRD surprisingly won the nine boroughs in the western half of the city. Juntos Hacemos Historia (
MORENA,
PT,
PVEM) won the seven boroughs in the eastern half of the city.
Winning candidates for borough mayor:
- Azcapotzalco: Margarita Saldana
PAN[6]
- Álvaro Obregón: Lía Limón García
PAN[6]
- Benito Juárez: Santiago Taboada
PAN[6]
- Coyoacán: Giovanni Gutierrez
PRD[6]
- Cuajimalpa: Adrian Rubalcava
PRI[6]
- Cuauhtémoc: Sandra Xantall Cuevas
PAN[6]
- Gustavo A. Madero: Francisco Chiguil
MORENA[6]
- Iztacalco: Raul Armando Quintero
MORENA[6]
- Iztapalapa: Clara Brugada
MORENA[6]
- Magdalena Contreras: Luis Gerardo Quijano
PRI[6]
- Miguel Hidalgo: Mauricio Tabe
PAN[6]
- Milpa Alta: Judith Venegas
MORENA[6]
- Tláhuac: Berenice Hernandez
MORENA[6]
- Tlalpan: Alfa Gonzalez Magallenes
PRD[6]
- Venustiano Carranza: Evelyn Parra
MORENA[6]
- Xochimilco: Jose Carlos Acosta
MORENA[6]
PAN and
PRI request a recount.[14]
Other candidates for borough mayor:
- Cuauhtémoc – Dolores Padierna
MORENA, former federal Senator (2012-2015) and federal Deputy (1997-2000 and 2003–2006)[15]
- Sugey Abrego
PVEM[16]
- Blue Demon Jr. (Redes Sociales Progresistas,
RSP)[16]
- Alfredo Adame (
RSP)[16]
- Héctor Hernández (
RSP)[16]
Mexico State
75 deputies, 125 municipalities[1]
Several communities reported irregularities and violence on election day.[17]
Mayoral elections:
- Amecameca: Two people were injured during a shooting incident that interrupted voting for only a few minutes.[18]
- Metepec: Twenty men destroyed a polling place and hit voters, but voting continued later.[19]
- Naucalpan: A fake grenade briefly caused panic.[20]
- Nextlalpan: The Instituto Electoral del Estado de México (IEEM) says that irregularities and violence on election day make it impossible to give a preliminary vote count (PREP), it may be necessary to hold another election.
PRI says that vandals entered the candidate's house and burned it, in addition to sexually assaulting the candidate, and they destroyed voting material.
MORENA says the allegation are false.[21]
- Valle de Chalco: Two polling stations were attacked by armed gunment, causing their early closure.[22]
- Tepotzotlán: Ángeles Zuppa Villegas
MC, daughter of three-time mayor Ángel Zuppa Núñez.[23]
Alderman:
- Atizapán de Zaragoza: César Basilio Campos
MORENA is photographed with a gun reserved for the army. He is also known for driving a sports car worth ten times his salary.[24]
Morelos
20 deputies, 33 municipalities[1]
Municipal presidencies[25] ( PES and Panal:
MORENA won seven municipalities alone, plus five in alliance with
PES or Panal.
- Jojutla: Juan Ángel Flores Bustamante
MORENA (reelected)
- Jiutepec: Rafael Reyes
MORENA (reelected)
- Puente de Ixtla: Claudia Mazari
MORENA
- Cuautla Rodrigo Arredondo
MORENA
- Axochiapan: Félix Sánchez
MORENA
- Tlaltizapán: Gabriel Moreno
MORENA
- Tlaquiltenango: Carlos Franco
MORENA
- Jojutla: Juan Ángel Flores Bustamante
PAN won three municipalities alone, two in alliance with
PSD and one in alliance with the Humanistic party: Cuernavaca Municipality, Emiliano Zapata, Morelos, Yecapixtla, Ocuituco, and Atlatlahucan.
PES won five municipalities by itself in addition to the ones it won in alliance with Morena: Jonacatepec, Tepalcingo, Zacatepec, Zacualpan de Amilpas, and Temoac.
PRI won Xochitepec and Mazatepec alone plus Huitzilac and Miacatlán in alliance with
PRD.
- Partido Redes Sociales Progresistas (RSP) won Jantetelco and Tlalnepantla. *
MC won Tepoztlán.
- Partido Apoyo Social won Tlayacapan.
- Panal: Totolapan.
- Morelos Progresa: Amacuzac.
- Independent: Coatlán del Río: Celso Nieto.
Nayarit
Governor, 30 deputies, 20 municipalities, 138 councilmen (regidurías)[1]
Lorenzo Córdova of the Instituto Nacional Electoral (INE) warned that Governor Antonio Echevarría ( PAN) said on February 26, 2021, that the state does not have the MXN $200 million needed to organize the elections. Córdova said on March 5 that Echevarría was lying to evade his responsibilities.[8]
Nuevo León
Governor, 42 deputies, 51 municipalities[1]
Mayoral candidates:
- Cadereyta – Ernesto Quintanilla, “Juntos Haremos Historia”[26]
- Escobedo – Andrés Mijes Llovera, “Juntos Haremos Historia”[26]
- General Terán – Gabriela Garza Garza, “Juntos Haremos Historia”[26]
- Juárez – Héctor de la Garza Villarreal, “Juntos Haremos Historia”[26]
- Linares – María Guadalupe Guidi Kawas, “Juntos Haremos Historia”[26]
- Monterrey – Luis Donaldo Colosio Riojas
MC, currently local deputy, son of former presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio Murrieta[27]
- San Nicolás de los Garza – Josefina Villarreal González withdraws her candidacy from “Juntos Haremos Historia” alleging unequal treatment compared to male candidates.[28]
- San Pedro – Miguel Treviño, de Hoyos (incumbent), “Juntos Haremos Historia”[26]
Local deputies:
- District 1 – Mayco Fabián Tapia Quiñones (Fuerza por Mexico); assassinated during robbery attempt on March 24, 2021[29]
Oaxaca
PRI,
PAN, and
PRD agree on candidates for 80 of the 153 municipalities and for 25 of the 42 local deputies.[30]
Polling places could not be installed on June 6 due to social-political conflicts in seven communities. 800 ballots were stolen in “El Ocote” y San José Llano Grande, Miahuatlán de Porfirio Díaz.[31]
Puebla
41 deputies, 217 municipalities[1]
Quintana Roo
11 municipalities[1]
Mayors seeking reelection:[5]
- Benito Juárez (Cancún) – Mara Lezama
- Tulum – Víctor Mas
- Solidaridad (Playa del Carmen) – Laura Beristáin
- José María Morelos – Sofía Alcocer.
Juan Carrillo, mayor of Isla Mujeres, was granted leave to run for the federal Chamber of Deputies.[5]
Results in municipalities:
- Solidaridad (Playa del Carmen): A recount was ordered at the request of Juntos Haremos Historia. Preliminary results show Liliana Campos (Va por Mexico) won with 24,460 votes defeated Laura Beristain Navarrete (Juntos Haremos Historia), who had 20,889 votes.[32]
San Luis Potosí
Governor, 27 deputies, 58 municipalities[1]
Mayoral candidates:
- San Luis Potosí City – Xavier Nava
MORENA, although many members of Morena objected to the candidacy of the former member of PRD and PAN.[2]
Alderman:
Sinaloa
Governor, 40 deputies, 18 municipalities[1]
Sonora
Governor, 33 deputies, 72 municipalities[1]
Municipal presidents:
- Hermosillo Municipality: Célida Teresa López Cárdenas
MORENA seeks reelection. He is criticized for calling pro-abortion femininists ″morons″.[34]
Tabasco
35 deputies, 17 municipalities[1]
Mayoral candidates:[5]
- Centro Municipality (Villahermosa)
- Manuel Andrade
PRD, former governor (
PRI 2002–2006) who spent five years in prison for embezzlement.
- Andrés Granier
PRI, former governor (2007-2012).
- Manuel Andrade
Tamaulipas
36 deputies, 43 municipalities[1]
Tlaxcala
Governor, 25 deputies, 60 municipalities, 299 community presidents[1]
Yucatan
25 deputies, 106 municipalities[1]
Zacatecas
Governor, 30 deputies, 58 municipalities[1]
Absentee voting
Mexican citizens from eleven states who live overseas can vote electronically. Most of the elections are for governor, but those from Mexico City and Guerrero will be able to vote for Diputado Migrante and people from Jalisco can vote for Diputado por Representación de Proporcional.[35] INE approved a pilot program allowing prison inmates who are held in protective custody in Hermosillo (District 4, Sonora); Villa Comaltitlán, Chiapas; Coatlán del Río (District 4 Jojutla, Morelos); and Buena Vista Tomatlán (District 12 Apatzingán, Michoacán) to vote absentee ballot from May 17–19, 2021. The present order covers only male inmates, but it may be extended to females.[36]
Organized crime and politics
Several different criminal gangs implicated in drug trafficking, human trafficking, and fuel theft have a great deal of political influence in some states.[37] The Sinaloa Cartel exercises considerable control in the northwest while the Jalisco New Generation Cartel′s (CJNG) influence is in the west including Michoacan and Guerrero. The Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas are powerful in the northeast.[37]
In the past, drug cartels have influenced campaigns by supporting candidates and even running some of their own member or sympathizers as candidates for office[37] such as Lucero Sánchez López, former federal deputy from Sinaloa who was also Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán′s lover.[38] Election-related violence is of particular concern in Michoacan, not only because of the aforementioned drug cartels but also because of armed community police who often act as vigilantes.[38]
Ignacio Sánchez Cordero, who sought the candidacy of MORENA and
PVEM for mayor of Puerto Morelos Municipality in Quintana Roo, was assassinated on February 24.[39] At least 64 murders related to the political process occurred between September 2020 and March 2021, and Security Secretary (SSP) Rosa Icela Rodríguez promised more protection from the “crime party.”[40]
As of March 18, 55 candidates and precandidates had been murdered. 80% of the cases involved individuals who belonged to a party that did not control the state.[41] Between September 7, 2020, and June 5, 2021, 91 candidates were assassinated.[42]
Irregularities and election day violence
INE canceled the registration of 19 candidates of MORENA for failure to report pre-campaign expenses.[43]
The FGR (Federal Elections Prosecutor) is investigating about 80 complaints about Internet celebrities (Spanish: influencers) who illegally used social media to sway votes toward the PVEM.[44]
State of Mexico
Daniel Serrano, candidate ( MORENA) for municipal president in Cuautitlán Izcalli, complained about vote buying on election day.[45] The Instituto Electoral del Estado de México (IEEM) says that irregularities and violence on election day in Nextlalpan, State of Mexico, make it impossible to give a preliminary vote count (PREP), it may be necessary to hold another election.
PRI says that vandals entered the candidate's house and burned it, in addition to sexually assaulting the candidate, and they destroyed voting material.
MORENA says the allegation are false.[21]
Ricardo Almaraz MC, candidate for supplementary receiver in Tepotzotlán, State of Mexico, was shot and killed the day after the election, June 7.[23]
Violence was reported in Amecameca,[18] Metepec,[19] Naucalpan,[20] Nextlalpan,[21] and Valle de Chalco.[22]
Scheduled results
Counting for preliminary results (PREP) began on June 6, rapid counting on June 7, and certification of final results are due on August 23, 2021.[1]
See also
References
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