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Evidence of Election Fraud Grows in México

by "wen.kroy" <wen.kroy@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Aug 3, 2006 at 06:43 PM

Evidence of Election Fraud Grows in México

By Chuck Collins and Joshua Holland, AlterNet
Posted on August 2, 2006, Printed on August 2, 2006

http://www.alternet.org/story/39763/

A month after more than 41 million Mexicans went to the polls to elect
their 
next president, the country is still awaiting a result. A preliminary
count 
of polling station tally sheets put conservative Felipe Calderón of the 
National Action Party (PAN) ahead with a slight lead over left-populist 
Andres Manuel López Obrador of the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD). Both

candidates have claimed victory, with López Obrador and his sup****ters 
holding vigils and protests across the country and calling for a 
vote-by-vote recount.

That hasn't kept a consensus from emerging in the commercial media that 
Calderón won by a small margin in a squeaky-clean election. In a
hyperbolic 
editorial on July 30 -- one that bordered on the ridiculous -- the 
Wa****ngton Post accused López Obrador, known as AMLO to his sup****ters, of

taking "a lesson from Joseph Stalin" and launching an "anti-democracy 
campaign" by demanding a manual recount and urging his sup****ters to take
to 
the streets in peaceful protests. Calling the vote "a success story and a 
model for other nations," the editors concluded that it's "difficult to 
overstate the irresponsibility of Mr. López Obrador's actions."

Days after the election, the New York Times irresponsibly declared
candidate 
Calderón the winner, even though no victor had been declared under Mexican

law, and just this week, in an article about López Obrador's protests, the

Times re****ted that López Obrador had "escalated his campaign to undo 
official results."

But there are no "official" results and probably won't be until after
Sept. 
1. Under Mexican law, the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) is charged
with 
running the elections and counting the vote. But only the country's
Election 
Tribunal, known by its Mexican nickname as the "TRIFE," has the power to 
declare a victor (See here for background on the TRIFE). They have until 
Sept. 6 to rule on the election.

It appears that the U.S. media has become so enamored with the construct
of 
the "anti-democratic" left in Latin America -- the ubiquitous "fiery 
populists" (a term that has described everyone from the centrist Lula da 
Silva to Hugo Chávez) -- that they are incapable of fulfilling their basic

mandate to inform their readers when it comes to the political landscape 
south of the border. It's nothing short of journalistic malpractice.

But back in the real world, a growing body of credible evidence from 
mainstream Mexican journalists, independent election observers and
respected 
scholars indicates that an attempt was made to deliver the presidency to 
Calderón. It includes a pattern of irregularities at the polls,
interference 
by the ruling party and some very suspicious statistical patterns in the 
"official" results.

The TRIFE is now sifting through 900 pages of formal complaints lodged by 
López Obrador. Their ruling on those challenges will indicate how well 
México's electoral process holds up in a closely fought and highly
polarized 
race.

Growing evidence of irregularities and fraud

México has a history of the party in power's using its clout to tip the 
election in its favor, and strict laws prohibiting ruling party
interference 
were enacted in the 1990s. Election law prevented Vicente Fox, the
outgoing 
PAN president, from making public statements of a partisan or political 
nature. But he overstepped this line many times in the 2006 campaign, 
including dozens of speeches reinforcing candidate Felipe Calderón's basic

message that López Obrador was a "danger to México." In a well-publicized 
speech, candidate López Obrador responded, "With all respect, Mr.
President, 
shut up. You sound like a chattering bird." Fox continued with these 
speeches until election authorities and public commentators warned Fox he 
was violating election laws.

The Fox administration also ran public service announcements touting 
government programs and services and promoting the vote. PAN saturated the

television airwaves with "swift-boat" style attack ads against López 
Obrador, comparing him to Venezuela's Hugo Chávez and calling him a
"danger 
to México." Election authorities eventually ordered these commercials off 
the air on the grounds that they were untrue and maligned the candidate's 
character, but critics believe they moved too slowly.

Under Mexican law, ruling party interference is a serious charge and
grounds 
for annulling an election. In the last ten years, the same Electoral 
Tribunal judges that are reviewing AMLO's complaints annulled governors' 
races in Tabasco and Colima, based on ruling party interference. The 
Institutional Revolution Party (PRI), which ruled México for seven decades

before the system was reformed in the 1990s, made vote buying and voter 
coercion into a high art form, and there is strong evidence that they were

up to their old tricks in the 2006 election. With PRI governors in 17 of 
México's 31 states, election observers do***ented a significant number of 
examples of voters being offered money or receiving food or building 
materials in exchange for their PRI vote. In a country where half the 
citizens live in poverty and rely on different forms of government 
assistance, voters are often told that their public assistance is
dependent 
on voting for the party in power. There are examples of PAN using similar 
practices, especially a well-do***ented case of funds diverted from a San 
Luis Potosi building program into PAN electoral races.

The Mexican electoral system has come a long way in two decades in 
implementing anti-fraud systems. But there are still several ways that 
results can be tampered with on election day. López Obrador's campaign and

hundreds of independent election observers do***ented several hundred
cases 
of "old fa****oned" election-day fraud in making their case for a recount.

Here's how the system was supposed to work. On July 2, Mexicans voted at 
over 130,000 different polling stations, casting separate ballots for 
president, senator and federal deputy. Each political party was encouraged

to have registered poll watchers at every polling station to observe the 
voting process and count at the end of the day. As international and
Mexican 
election observers noted, however, problems emerged when there weren't 
enough independent and party observers to go around. In regions where one 
party was dominant, this created op****tunities for vote shaving, ballot 
stuffing, lost ballots and other forms of fraud.

The PRD's strongest case for a recount comes from the fact that ballots in

almost one-third of the country were not counted in the presence of 
independent observers. One analysis of IFE results found that there were 
2,366 polling places where only a PAN observer was present. In these 
districts, Calderón beat López Obrador by a whopping 71-21 margin.

Other elements of PRD's legal challenge include do***entation of several 
ballot boxes found in dumps in the PRD stronghold of México City. They
also 
point to evidence such as the nonpartisan Civic Alliance's re****t 
do***enting 17 polling sites in PAN-dominated Nuevo León, Michoacan and 
Querétaro, where the number of votes cast vastly exceeded the number of 
registered voters at a site.

Re****ts by international and domestic election observers affiliated with
the 
Civic Alliance and Global Exchange stop short of claiming fraud in the 
elections. They laud the dedication of most poll workers they monitored
and 
the preparations for the vote in most of the polling places, as well as
the 
orderly and peaceful process overall. But the ***ulative evidence is
damning 
in such a closely contested race.

In the weeks after the election, PRD observers again sounded the alarm as 
sealed ballot packets were being illegally opened at IFE district offices
in 
several PAN-dominated regions. PRD officials accused IFE officials of 
possibly tampering with ballots or attempting to cover up fraud in the
event 
of a recount. The TRIFE ordered these offices to stop opening vote
packets.

While the López Obrador campaign has not made major charges of "cyber 
fraud," there is an emerging controversy over the IFE's role in re****ting 
who was ahead in the vote count. For the 2006 election, the IFE had 
developed a sophisticated system to provide preliminary results called the

PREP. Relying on results being phoned in from a sample of precincts, the
IFE 
could compile a credible picture of the vote. If the PREP showed one 
candidate with a clear majority, the system would have allowed Mexicans to

go to sleep on election night knowing who their next president would be.
But 
because of the razor close results, the PREP proved to be an inadequate 
measure.

Now research is emerging to suggest that the PREP results were cooked to 
create the appearance of a Calderón victory. Physicist Jorge López at the 
University of Texas, El Paso, conducted a statistical analysis of the PREP

results and found that, as the results came in, the differential between
the 
candidates' totals remained almost constant. One would expect that, as 
results from each party's geographic strongholds were counted, the gap 
between their totals would rise and would fall. In such a tight election, 
one would even expect the lead to change back and forth as the count 
progressed. None of that happened. The results of a third candidate,
Roberto 
Madrazo of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), fluctuated as 
expected.

He also noted that there was very little deviation between the actual 
results as they came in and the average results; in a normal, natural 
distribution, one would expect significant differences between the two (it

should look something like a squashed bell-shaped curve). Dr. López 
concluded the pattern was "a clear indication that the data was
manufactured 
by an algorithm and does not stand a chance at passing as data originated
at 
the actual voting."

Luis Mochan, a physicist at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México,
did 
similar work. He noted that the PREP data was posted after the first
10,000 
re****ts had been processed, and looked at whether those first 10,000
re****ts 
were consistent with the statistical trends for the rest of the day. When
he 
plotted the data backwards, Calderón's vote total originated at zero, as
is 
normal, but López Obrador began the day 126,000 votes in the hole.

Mochan and López both point out that the Calderón began the day building a

large percentage lead -- seven points -- that decreased steadily
throughout 
the day. The large early lead would have been handy from a psychological
and 
political perspective, allowing Calderón to claim that he led all day
long, 
but the results had to end in a close result given that polls conducted a 
week before the tally showed a statistical dead heat.

Mochan also notes gross discrepancies in the number of votes processed
late 
in the evening: "At the end of the plot, we find intervals with more than 
1,200 votes per [voting] booth. I understand that no booth was to receive 
more than 750 votes. Even more worrisome, some data points indicate a 
negative number of votes per booth."

Mochan notes that these statistical anomalies aren't definitive proof of 
anything. But economist James Galbraith, reviewing Mochan's data,
speculated 
about a likely scenario that would fit the discrepancies seen that night:

Felipe Calderón started the night with an advantage in total votes, a gift

from the authorities.

As the count progressed, this advantage was maintained by misre****ting of 
the actual results. This enabled Calderón to claim that he had led through

the entire process -- an argument greatly repeated but spurious in any
case 
because it is only the final count that matters.

Toward the end of the count, further adjustments were made to sup****t the 
appearance of a victory by Calderón.

Critics suggest that the IFE may have aggressively pushed to swiftly
declare 
Calderón a victor, obviating the need for a poll-by-poll vote recount.

The U.S. media was also confused on the Wednesday after the vote when the 
IFE ordered all 300 district offices to review the tally sheets. It was 
widely re****ted as a "recount," when in fact very few ballots were
actually 
counted. In some cases, such as when a tally sheet was illegible, the
sealed 
ballot packets where opened and recounted. Almost every time that
occurred, 
observers encountered significant errors in the vote count. In the state
of 
México, one tally sheet recorded 88 votes for López Obrador when the
recount 
of ballots found 188 votes. Whether it was human error or intentional vote

shaving, in a tight election race, these examples gain heightened 
significance.

None of these re****ts in and of themselves constitute a smoking gun. But
the 
questions they raise need to be answered. There is far more evidence 
pointing to fraud in the Mexican elections in 2006 than was made publicly 
available about Ukraine's contested vote in 2004. Comparing the media and 
political establishment's reactions to the two reveals the transparent 
dishonesty in backing Calderón's claim of victory; in 2004 many of the
same 
voices that are now calling López Obrador "undemocratic" were screaming
that 
the Ukrainian tally had to be annulled and only a new election would
assure 
democracy in the former Soviet satellite. In both instances, the candidate

who declared victory was friendly towards a powerful neighboring state; in

2004 that state was Russia, and two years later it's the United States. 
Forget about threatening México's fragile democratic institutions -- that 
makes all the difference to the editorial boards of the New York Times and

the Wa****ngton Post.

According to the Mexican daily La Journada, over two million sup****ters of

López Obrador gathered in México City on Sunday, July 30, the largest
public 
demonstration in México's history. Millions of voices chanted "vote by
vote, 
poll by poll," calling on the Electoral Tribunal to order a recount. A
poll 
released this week found that Mexicans, by a 20-point margin (48-28), want
a 
vote-by-vote count. López Obrador has said he will call off protests when 
the Tribunal agrees to a recount and will honor its final decision.

As for the charge in the U.S. media that López Obrador is undermining 
democracy and the rule of law by calling on his sup****ters to protest, we 
believe that the rights of peaceful assembly and free speech are im****tant

democratic tenets. Public protests have played a historic part in México's

three decade-long transition to democracy.

President and PAN leader Vicente Fox called for direct action when he 
believed he was victimized by electoral fraud in his race for the 
governor****p of Guanajuato in 1991. Fox called on thousands of sup****ters
to 
take to the streets and block highways, and the results were eventually 
overturned. Asked before the 2000 presidential election if he would do the

same thing if he suspected fraud, he didn't hesitate to say "we will be
very 
alert to any irregularities, and we will submit the appropriate legal 
accusations that are necessary. If there is any instability [as a result
of 
those accusations], it will be due to whatever they have done fraudulently

to avoid recognizing our victory."

While Calderón has opposed a ballot-by-ballot recount, even some of his 
staunchest sup****ters have argued that the process would assure Mexicans' 
faith in their electoral authorities and strengthen the country's young 
democracy. In a race where over 64 percent of Mexicans voted against him, 
Calderón, if he should prove victorious, will need all the legitimacy he
can 
muster.

As México awaits the rulings of the electoral tribunal, tensions are high.

The campaign -- often dirty -- and the close results have polarized the 
country. Given the context, the U.S. media's water-carrying for Calderón's

campaign is anything but helpful. The fact that there have been no 
"official" results is not open to dispute, and until AMLO's allegations
have 
been investigated, there is no way that anyone can say who will come out 
ahead.

-----

Chuck Collins is the co-author of "Economic Apartheid in America: A Primer

on Economic Inequality and Insecurity" (New Press). He is a senior scholar

at the Institute for Policy Studies and lives in Oaxaca, México. Joshua 
Holland is an AlterNet staff writer.

© 2006 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/39763/
__._,_.___
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Evidence of Election Fraud Grows in México
"wen.kroy" <  2006-08-03 18:43:12 

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