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Leftist Obrador Will Challenge Mexico Election Results
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, July 6, 2006

MEXICO CITY -- Conservative candidate Felipe Calderon was leading in an official vote count by a razor-thin margin Thursday, but his leftist rival said he won't accept the results and will take his demands to court.

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said he was robbed of victory, and he urged his supporters to gather this weekend in downtown Mexico City, stirring fears he would mobilize massive protests that could lead to violence.

"We are going to the Federal Electoral Tribunal with the same demand - that the votes be counted - because we cannot accept these results," he said. "We are always going to act in a responsible manner, but at the same time, we have to defend the citizens' will."

With some 99.2 percent of the vote tallies counted after Sunday's election, Calderon of the National Action Party had 35.77 percent compared to 35.42 percent for Lopez Obrador of Democratic Revolution. About 150,000 votes out of more than 41 million cast separated the two.

Lopez Obrador had led throughout the official count until he was overtaken by Calderon with 97 percent of the vote tallies recorded early Thursday. Ruling party officials said Lopez Obrador had been ahead only because his supporters had been stalling the count with protests in Calderon's strongholds.

Once the count is complete, it can be disputed before the tribunal. A winner must be declared by Sept. 6.

Lopez Obrador demanded that electoral officials carry out a manual ballot-by-ballot count, instead of just tallying vote totals as they have been doing.

But Luis Carlos Ugalde, president of the Federal Electoral Institute, said that was not possible.

"Mexican law is very clear on when a ballot box can be opened: only when there are problems with the vote tallies, when the tally sheet has obviously been changed, or when the box has been tampered with," Ugalde said.

Mexico's peso strengthened against the dollar early Thursday after the official tally showed the business-friendly Calderon leading.

Before dawn, as the count switched to Calderon's favor, he called for the country to move beyond the bitter race.

"Starting today, let us help Mexico begin a new era of peace, of reconciliation," he told hundreds of cheering supporters at his campaign headquarters.

Electoral workers at 300 district headquarters across the country were adding up results in the official tally that began Wednesday. By law, they were required to work nonstop until they finished the count.

Calling the election "the most democratic and cleanest in the history of Mexico," Calderon asked his rival and all Mexicans to erase the bitter divisions that arose during the lengthy campaign, and focus "not on our differences, but on our similarities."

He also turned his remarks to the millions who did not vote for him, asking them "to give me a chance to win your confidence."

In an exclusive interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday, Calderon offered to include Lopez Obrador in his Cabinet - an effort to build a coalition government and avoid weeks of political impasse. But he said he did not believe his rival would accept, adding that the two men had not spoken to each other since the election.

Thursday's recount capped a week of vote tallying in the disputed race.

When polls closed, citizens staffing the 130,488 polling places opened the ballot boxes and counted the votes, then sealed them into packages with their tallies attached and reported unofficial totals to the Federal Electoral Institute. The institute then posted preliminary results on its Web site.

The sealed packages were delivered to district headquarters, where election workers used the tallies to add up the official vote totals.

Once the results have been turned over to the seven-judge Federal Electoral Tribunal, it hears any complaints and can overturn elections.

Leonel Cota, president of Lopez Obrador's Democratic Revolution Party, said the party might challenge the results in international tribunals.

© 2006 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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