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Wikipedia

1982 Mexican general election

General elections were held in Mexico on 4 July 1982.[1] The presidential elections were won by Miguel de la Madrid, who received 74% of the vote. In the Chamber of Deputies election, the Institutional Revolutionary Party won 299 of the 372 seats,[2] as well as winning 63 of the 64 seats in the Senate election.[3] Voter turnout was 75% in the presidential election and 73% and 66% for the two parts of the Chamber elections.[4]

1982 Mexican general election

← 1976 4 July 1982 1988 →
Presidential election
 
Nominee Miguel de la Madrid Pablo Emilio Madero
Party PRI PAN
Home state Colima Coahuila
Popular vote 16,748,006 3,700,045
Percentage 74.31% 16.42%

Votes for De la Madrid by state
  90% - 100%
  80% - 90%
  70% - 80%
  60% - 70%
  50% - 60%

President before election

José López Portillo
PRI

Elected President

Miguel de la Madrid
PRI

Rosario Ibarra, who was nominated presidential candidate by the Revolutionary Workers' Party, was the first woman ever to run for president in a Mexican election.

These would be the last of the symbolic/non-competitive presidential elections in which the PRI (in power since 1929) and its presidential candidate faced no serious opposition and won by a huge margin.

Background

The previous presidential elections, celebrated in 1976, had featured only one presidential candidate (José López Portillo). The lack of any opposition in that election raised serious doubts, nationally and internationally, regarding the legitimacy of the Mexican political system under the PRI, which had been in power since 1929.[5] Due to this, a political reform was passed in 1977 which allowed many more parties to compete in federal elections (notoriously including the decades-old Mexican Communist Party, which until then had been barred from participating in elections) as well as providing better representation for opposition parties in the Chamber of the Deputies.[6]

As a result, nine political parties were able to participate in the 1982 elections. In the presidential election, there were seven registered candidates, which at the time was the biggest number of candidates registered in a presidential election and was a stark contrast with the single-candidate election of 1976.

Nonetheless, these proved to be rather cosmetic changes, as the PRI continued to be the dominant party and practices of vote buying and electoral fraud remained widespread. It wasn't until the mid-to-late 80's that the PRI began to face real challenges at the state and federal levels by opposition parties (particularly, by the PAN and the PRD).

Designation of the PRI presidential candidate

By 1981, the officials that were perceived by the public opinion as having the most possibilities of being chosen by López Portillo to succeed him in the Presidency were Jorge Díaz Serrano (Director General of PEMEX), Miguel de la Madrid (Secretary of Programming and the Budget) and Javier García Paniagua (National President of the PRI). Among them, initially Díaz Serrano was apparently the most favoured to obtain the presidential candidacy, being a long-time friend of López Portillo and enjoying the popularity that came with the financial boom that the country had enjoyed in those years due to the high international oil prices and the discovery and development of new oil fields during Díaz Serrano's tenure in PEMEX, as Mexico had become one of the main oil exporters in previous years (a famous phrase in this respect was said by President López Portillo in August 1977, when he stated that the country should become used to "administering the abundance").[7]

However, in June 1981 the international oil prices plummeted, and Díaz Serrano, without the authorization of the economic cabinet, consequently announced that Mexico would lower the prices of its oil by 4 dollars. The controversy unleashed by Díaz Serrano's decision resulted in his resignation as Director General of PEMEX and, with it, the end of his presidential aspirations.

In this manner, the two serious contenders that remained were García Paniagua and De la Madrid. García Paniagua, son of General Marcelino García Barragán, was a faithful reflection of the post-revolutionary political elite, and was identified with the "populist" sector which was more inclined to uphold the discourse of the Mexican Revolution and to continue López Portillo's general policies.[8] In contrast, De la Madrid (who had a post graduate degree in Public Administration from Harvard University) was perceived as a skilled technocrat, mainly recognized for the elaboration of the Global Development Plan, which was announced in April 1980 and was intended to guide the planning of the economic policy of the López Portillo government.

The fall in the oil prices in June 1981 radically altered the national scene, and the process of the selection of the PRI presidential candidate took place while an increasingly serious economic crisis was taking over the nation. The uncertainty threatened with paralysing the public administration, so López Portillo was forced to announce, ahead of time,[a] on 25 September the chosen person to succeed him as President of the Republic: Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado.[9]

The selection of De la Madrid was mainly due to the fact that, in the middle of the crisis which was beginning to wreak havoc in the national economy, López Portillo considered that his Secretary of Programming and the Budget was the best man to face the situation because of his administrative skill (particularly due to his elaboration of the aforementioned Global Development Plan).[10] As De la Madrid himself would latter recount, García Paniagua's reaction at not having been the chosen one was particularly aggressive, and so he was replaced in the Presidency of the PRI by Pedro Ojeda Paullada a couple of weeks after the announcement.[11]

The designation of De la Madrid aroused significant opposition from inside the party, specially from its more traditional sectors, since the candidate was perceived as a conservative technocrat with no political skill (in fact, just like López Portillo before him, De la Madrid had never held a popularly elected post at the time of his nomination as presidential candidate). One of those dissatisfied was the old leader of the CTM, Fidel Velázquez, who had reportedly favoured García Paniagua. In contrast, the announcement of De la Madrid's candidacy was well received by the banking community and the private sector, which was reflected by a 10-point increase in the Mexican Stock Exchange the day of his nomination.[12] In spite of the initial hostility by many sectors inside the PRI, in the end De la Madrid manage to consolidate his position and to gather the support of his party, agglutinating the so-called "cargada priísta" around himself.

Campaign and economic crisis

After being nominated as presidential pre-candidate, De la Madrid appointed Manuel Bartlett Díaz as General Coordinator of his campaign,[13] while he entrusted the direction of the PRI's Institute of Political, Economic and Social Studies (IEPES) to his old collaborator from the Secretariat of Programming and the Budget, Carlos Salinas de Gortari.[14] In practice, Bartlett acted as the "Political chief" of the campaign, and Salinas de Gortari was its "Economic chief".[15]

1981 and 1982 were particularly difficult years for the Mexican economy. At the time of De la Madrid's nomination in September 1981, the public finances of the nation had already begun to experience the first ravages as a consequence of the fall in oil prices in June. Nonetheless, at first the discourse of De la Madrid's campaign, while not denying the crisis, preferred to focus on other subjects and didn't deviate significantly from the traditional "nationalist" and "revolutionary" tone of previous PRI campaigns. De la Madrid proposed seven central theses as the centrepiece of his campaign: "Revolutionary nationalism", "integral democratization", "egalitarian society", "decentralization of the national life", "development, employment and fight against inflation", "democratic planning" and, the most famous of them all, "moral renovation of the society".[16] The latter, which emphasised stopping and fighting government corruption, had a particular impact on voters, since the López Portillo administration had been mired in grave corruption scandals at all levels, involving officials appointed by the President (the more infamous cases were those of Arturo Durazo Moreno aka "El Negro Durazo", Jorge Díaz Serrano and Carlos Hank González) and even members of the president's family (many of whom also held government positions during his presidency). In this context, according to a poll from October 1981, 70% of the population considered that corruption in Mexico had reached "gigantic levels".[17]

As the months passed, the economy continued to deteriorate: from September 1981 to January 1982, capital flight and distrust of the national economy skyrocketed. On 5 January 1982, the government urged people to avoid the waste of gasoline, warning that otherwise it would have to impose rationing. In February, the López Portillo government was forced to devalue the peso, leaving it at an exchange rate of 46 pesos per US dollar. By then, the government had already lost 3,000 million dollars from its international reserves.[18] In spite of this first devaluation, speculation and capital flight did not cease, inflation continued rising, and the government had to adjust the public tariffs.

At a campaign stop at Villahermosa, De la Madrid hinted at legalizing abortion, stating that "as the rate of population growth increases, scarce resources -and I refer here to resources generally, not only economic resources- fail to keep pace with that growth", and addressed the necessity of discussing issues "such as respect for the freedom not only of the couple but especially of women, with a view to giving them truly free choices and protecting their health", explicitly referring to "the topic of abortion -a delicate matter to deal with, but one that has been touched upon here- because it is a topic that society cannot disregard".[19]

In March, as a concession to the PRI candidate, López Portillo made some changes in his cabinet and appointed Jesús Silva-Herzog Flores and Miguel Mancera Aguayo (both close to De la Madrid) as Secretary of the Treasury and Director of the Bank of Mexico, respectively.

As the economic crisis worsened, the De la Madrid campaign began to adopt a more "realist" tone. In a speech delivered by the candidate on 24 May 1982 at León, Guanajuato, De la Madrid advocated a profound program that included fighting inflation and currency volatility, he committed to avoiding a recession and protecting employment, and he finally expressed his rejection of "populism and any form of demagogy".[20] Many commenters pointed out that De la Madrid himself, as Secretary of Programming and the Budget and as the author of the "Global Development Plan" in 1980 – which had not anticipated a fall in the oil prices and whose mechanisms turned out to be insufficient to deal with the subsequent disaster – was to some extent responsible for the economic crisis.[21]

The PRI was criticized for the high cost of the official campaign in spite of the nation's critical financial situation. In defense, De la Madrid stated that "We could have saved lots of money focusing the campaign on TV and radio, but the Mexican idiosyncrasy demands that the people meet their candidate and have the opportunity to convey their problems to him" and that he preferred "the cost of political campaigns to the cost of the repression that dictatorial regimes carry with them".[22] De la Madrid made an extensive tour of the national territory, as was the tradition for Priísta presidential candidates; journalist Isabel Arvide, who was sent by El Sol de México to cover the campaign, stated that De la Madrid toured more than 114 000 kilometers on his campaign.[23]

On 19 June the Unified Socialist Party of Mexico (PSUM) carried out the closing campaign rally of its presidential candidate, Arnoldo Martínez Verdugo, at the Zócalo in Mexico City. The event was of particular importance, both for it being the first opposition demonstration to be held at the Zócalo in 14 years (since the student protests and the subsequent Tlatelolco Massacre in 1968, the government had barred opposition organizations from using the compound), and for the relatively big assistance that it had, with many thousands of PSUM sympathizers joining that day. The event was remembered by the press as the "Red Zócalo".[24][25]

In spite of the worsening economic crisis and the corruption scandals of the López Portillo administration, the PRI held a lead in opinion polls and, as it had always happened since it took power in 1929, its candidate was the eventual winner of the election by a large margin, as the opposition remained divided and none of its candidates had enough political strength to effectively challenge De la Madrid and the massive political apparatus of the PRI. De la Madrid's aforementioned proposal of "Moral renovation of the society" was also credited as a reason for his decisive victory, as voters hoped that the austere, reserved candidate would indeed make a serious effort to finally curb corruption in Mexico. In addition, De la Madrid was able to distance himself from López Portillo and to project himself as a serious, hard-working technocrat who was the "perfect antidote" for the social and economic disaster left by his predecessor.

Results

President

CandidatePartyVotes%
Miguel de la MadridPRIPARMPPS16,748,00674.31
Pablo Emilio MaderoNational Action Party3,700,04516.42
Arnoldo Martínez VerdugoUnified Socialist Party of Mexico821,9953.65
Ignacio González GollazMexican Democratic Party433,8861.93
Rosario IbarraWorkers' Revolutionary Party416,4481.85
Cándido Díaz CerecedoSocialist Party of the Workers342,0051.52
Manuel Moreno SánchezSocial Democratic Party48,4130.21
Non-registered candidates28,4740.13
Total22,539,272100.00
Valid votes22,539,27295.53
Invalid/blank votes1,053,6164.47
Total votes23,592,888100.00
Registered voters/turnout31,526,38674.84
Source: Nohlen

By state

The results by state were validated by the Chamber of Deputies in the same session as the national-level results, despite several differences.

State De la Madrid
(PRI + PARM + PPS)
Madero
(PAN)
Martínez Verdugo
(PSUM)
González Gollas
(PDM)
Ibarra
(PRT)
Díaz Cerecedo
(PST)
Moreno
(PSD)
Unregistered candidates Null votes Total
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes %
Aguascalientes 139,796 70.24% 31,570 15.86% 1,879 0.94% 3,122 1.56% 1,300 0.65% 4,009 2.01% 345 0.17% 33 0.01% 16,967 8.52% 199,021
Baja California 287,673 53.92% 147,092 27.57% 16,456 3.08% 6,298 1.18% 12,403 2.32% 11,047 2.07% 1,149 0.21% 346 0.06% 50,996 9.55% 533,460
Baja California Sur 66,048 72.78% 13,852 15.26% 2,336 2.57% 537 0.59% 3,444 3.79% 763 0.84% 124 0.13% 23 0.02% 3,617 3.98% 90,744
Campeche 104,416 84.05% 8,052 6.48% 898 0.72% 401 0.32% 333 0.27% 419 0.34% 52 0.04% 29 0.02% 9,631 7.75% 124,231
Chiapas 691,983 91.88% 21,043 2.79% 7,745 1.02% 1,436 0.19% 4,958 0.65% 8,848 1.17% 1,109 0.14% 762 0.10% 15206 2.01% 753,090
Chihuahua 372,284 62.02% 153,704 25.61% 13,157 2.19% 4,719 0.79% 2,813 0.47% 5,169 0.86% 740 0.12% 67 0.01% 47,626 7.93% 600,279
Coahuila 228,687 68.27% 86,155 25.72% 4,770 1.42% 996 0.30% 2,334 0.70% 6,581 1.96% 351 0.10% 292 0.09% 4,806 1.43% 334,972
Colima 137,371 89.20% 7,126 4.63% 1,331 0.86% 2,009 1.30% 737 0.48% 1,788 1.16% 82 0.05% 19 0.01% 3,534 2.29% 153,997
Durango 288,810 76.50% 67,159 17.79% 7,619 2.02% 2,732 0.72% 280 0.07% 2,453 0.65% 413 0.11% 12 0.003% 14,926 2.89% 517,341
Federal District 1,977,179 51.79% 892,214 23.37% 286,661 7.51% 90,003 2.36% 199,963 5.24% 81,817 2.14% 18,702 0.49% 10,779 0.28% 260,092 6.81% 3,817,410
Guanajuato 592,644 66.65% 178,468 20.07% 10,755 1.21% 61,125 6.87% 3,063 0.34% 12,214 1.37% 1,154 0.13% 76 0.01% 29,716 3.34% 889,215
Guerrero 430,840 83.28% 22,392 4.33% 20,798 4.02% 5,667 1.10% 6,524 1.26% 15,583 3.01% 594 0.11% 17 0.003% 14,926 2.89% 517,341
Hidalgo 499,123 86.45% 50,641 8.77% 8,876 1.54% 2,998 0.52% 4,806 0.83% 10,289 1.78% 537 0.09% 0 0% 107 0.02% 577,377
Jalisco 840,804 58.52% 359,328 25.01% 89,946 6.26% 49,284 3.43% 6,691 0.47% 12,122 0.84% 2,248 0.16% 112 0.01% 76,308 5.31% 1,436,843
Michoacán 611,252 76.79% 90,201 11.33% 16,774 2.11% 34,978 4.39% 5,106 0.64% 7,524 0.95% 723 0.09% 87 0.01% 29,380 3.69% 796,025
State of Mexico 1,553,624 57.83% 606,668 22.58% 137,571 5.12% 67,423 2.51% 91,453 3.40% 40,497 1.51% 7,643 0.28% 851 0.03% 180,793 6.73% 2,686,523
Morelos 256,063 75.86% 33,673 9.98% 8,587 2.54% 4,754 1.41% 15,142 4.49% 6,514 1.93% 644 0.19% 44 0.01% 12,116 3.59% 337,537
Nayarit 161,561 78.77% 6,833 3.33% 22,577 11.01% 2,013 0.98% 708 0.35% 1,106 0.54% 160 0.08% 48 0.02% 10,103 4.93% 205,109
Nuevo León 642,648 72.96% 213,606 24.25% 4,494 0.51% 2,984 0.34% 3,973 0.45% 3,615 0.41% 853 0.10% 39 0.004% 8,653 0.98% 880,865
Oaxaca 676,410 88.20% 46,185 6.02% 20,908 2.73% 2,296 0.30% 4,948 0.65% 4,467 0.58% 580 0.08% 58 0.01% 11,057 1.44% 766,909
Puebla 1,109,871 78.23% 135,615 9.56% 25,668 1.81% 8,455 0.60% 9,575 0.67% 8,802 0.62% 1,209 0.09% 126 0.01% 119,393 8.42% 1,418,714
Querétaro 200,118 76.08% 40,518 15.40% 3,439 1.31% 4,543 1.73% 1,267 0.48% 1,429 0.54% 467 0.18% 18 0.01% 11,222 4.27% 263,021
Quintana Roo 89,361 92.52% 3,513 3.64% 896 0.93% 247 0.26% 302 0.31% 845 0.87% 65 0.07% 15 0.02% 1,343 1.39% 96,587
San Luis Potosí 415,999 83.22% 41,171 8.24% 3,907 0.78% 21,209 4.24% 2,389 0.48% 4,149 0.83% 710 0.14% 49 0.01% 10,321 2.06% 499,904
Sinaloa 489,280 79.57% 65,035 10.58% 31,947 5.20% 2,713 0.44% 5,374 0.87% 4,596 0.75% 827 0.13% 48 0.01% 15,112 2.46% 614,932
Sonora 426,648 74.79% 113,166 19.84% 6,759 1.18% 1,688 0.30% 4,759 0.83% 1,215 0.21% 742 0.13% 152 0.03% 15,335 2.69% 570,464
Tabasco 315,340 93.00% 11,706 3.45% 2,129 0.63% 645 0.19% 1,045 0.31% 2,921 0.86% 207 0.06% 9 0.003% 5,080 1.50% 339,082
Tamaulipas 514,472 83.00% 60,663 9.79% 8,219 1.33% 6,293 1.02% 3,311 0.53% 3,917 0.63% 958 0.15% 53 0.01% 21,960 3.54% 619,846
Tlaxcala 190,754 81.38% 21,890 9.34% 3,897 1.66% 10,035 4.28% 1,048 0.45% 836 0.36% 139 0.06% 35 0.01% 5,758 2.46% 234,392
Veracruz 1,787,317 85.89% 69,622 3.35% 43,769 2.10% 29,187 1.40% 14,017 0.67% 73,672 3.54% 4,569 0.22% 14,246 0.68% 44,492 2.14% 2,080,891
Yucatán 271,844 81.21% 59,275 17.71% 322 0.10% 389 0.12% 947 0.28% 411 0.12% 141 0.04% 4 0.001% 1,395 0.42% 334,728
Zacatecas 350,986 85.15% 39,859 9.67% 6,903 1.67% 2,707 0.66% 1,435 0.35% 1,587 0.39% 176 0.04% 25 0.01% 8,518 2.07% 412,196
Total 16,721,206 70.96% 3,697,995 15.69% 821,993 3.49% 433,886 1.84% 416,448 1.77% 341,205 1.45% 48,413 0.21% 28,474 0.12% 1,053,616 4.47% 23,563,236
Source: , taken from the 9 September 1982 session of the Mexican Chamber of Deputies

Senate

 
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Institutional Revolutionary Party14,574,11470.6063–1
National Action Party3,678,09617.8200
Unified Socialist Party of Mexico866,3014.200New
Mexican Democratic Party438,4712.120New
Popular Socialist Party375,0591.821+1
Socialist Party of the Workers320,6721.550New
Workers' Revolutionary Party221,4211.070New
Authentic Party of the Mexican Revolution153,4950.740New
Social Democratic Party2,9660.010New
Non-registered candidates11,5390.0600
Total20,642,134100.00640
Valid votes20,642,13492.06
Invalid/blank votes1,780,3337.94
Total votes22,422,467100.00
Registered voters/turnout31,520,88471.14
Source: Nohlen, Gómez Tagle

Chamber of Deputies

 
PartyParty-listConstituencyTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%Seats
Institutional Revolutionary Party14,289,79365.71014,501,98869.36299299+3
National Action Party3,786,34817.41503,663,84617.52151+8
Unified Socialist Party of Mexico932,2144.2917914,3654.37017New
Mexican Democratic Party534,1222.4612475,0992.27012+2
Popular Socialist Party459,3032.1110395,0061.89010–1
Socialist Party of the Workers428,1531.9711372,6791.78011+1
Workers' Revolutionary Party308,0991.420264,6321.2700New
Authentic Party of the Mexican Revolution282,0041.300282,9711.3500–12
Social Democratic Party53,3060.25038,9940.1900New
Non-registered candidates671,9993.0901080.0000
Total21,745,341100.0010020,909,688100.003004000
Valid votes21,745,34195.1020,909,68899.95
Invalid/blank votes1,121,3784.9010,1920.05
Total votes22,866,719100.0020,919,880100.00
Registered voters/turnout31,516,37072.5631,520,88466.37
Source: Nohlen, Bailey[26]

Aftermath

The increase in voter turnout, which was of 74.82% according to official figures, was widely celebrated by the government as an advance against abstentionism. In spite of it and of the positive result for the PRI, the economic condition continued to deteriorate. In August, the country declared a moratorium on its foreign debt and the peso suffered another devaluation, remaining at an exchange rate of around 70 pesos per US dollar. Towards the end of the year it had further fallen to 149 pesos per dollar, which meant that the accumulated devaluation in 1982 was of 470%.[27]

The discredit of López Portillo near the end of his presidency, amid the severe economic crisis and the monumental corruption scandals which involved members of his government and his family, had no precedent in the recent memory of the nation.

The situation was such that on 1 September 1982, during his final Address to the Congress, President López Portillo asked for forgiveness from the nation's poor for having failed to improve their condition, as he shed some tears.[28] In the same Address to the Congress, López Portillo decreed the nationalization of the banks and a generalized exchange control. These measures, taken only three months before his term was set to end, caused serious differences between López Portillo and President-elect De la Madrid, who had expressed his complete disagreement with the measures and would later write that "it implied a severe lack of respect for me and a suspicion that the President intended to condition my government".[29] The relationship between the two became more distant in the following months, as De la Madrid perceived that López Portillo, through his son José Ramón, was trying to exercise too much power for an outgoing President and that he was trying to overshadow the President-elect.[30]

The National Action Party (PAN), which had nominated Pablo Emilio Madero as its presidential candidate, claimed that there had been many irregularities in the election, such as an unrestricted use of public resources in favor of the PRI candidates, emptying of electoral rolls, stuffing of ballot boxes, and that many ballots with votes for Madero and other opposition candidates had been thrown into the garbage by PRI officials; while they didn't go so far as to dispute that De la Madrid had indeed won, the PAN argued that the margin of victory of the PRI candidate had been artificially inflated and that Madero had obtained at least 4 million votes. With these arguments, in the 9 September session of the Chamber of Deputies, the PAN voted against the ruling which officially declared De la Madrid as President-elect.[31]

Notes

  1. ^ Generally, the so called "destape" ("uncovering"), which was the announcement by the PRI of the person chosen by the President to succeed him, would take place in October or November of the year prior to the presidential elections.

References

  1. ^ Dieter Nohlen (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p. 453 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  2. ^ Nohlen, p468
  3. ^ Nohlen, p470
  4. ^ Nohlen, p454
  5. ^ Riding, Alan (13 June 1976). "Mexico elects a symbol". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  6. ^ G.T. Silvia (2001) La transición inconclusa : treinta años de elecciones en México, p. 35 ISBN 968-12-1042-5
  7. ^ Beltrán del Río, Pascal (22 April 2020). "Petróleo: la maldición". Excelsior. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  8. ^ Ramos, Martinez & Ramírez. (1988). Salinas de Gortari: Candidato de la crisis. Plaza y Valdés Editores. p. 166. ISBN 968-856-128-2.
  9. ^ "Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado es el precandidato a la Presidencia". El Informador. EXC-AEE. 25 September 1981. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  10. ^ Ramos, Martinez & Ramírez. (1988). Salinas de Gortari: Candidato de la crisis. Plaza y Valdés Editores. pp. 164–165. ISBN 968-856-128-2.
  11. ^ De la Madrid Hurtado, Miguel (2004). Cambio de rumbo. Fondo de Cultura Económica. pp. 24–25. ISBN 968-16-7209-7.
  12. ^ "MIGUEL DE LA MADRID VISTO DE LEJOS, O DE COMO LA PRENSA INTERNACIONAL SE FUE CON MAS DE UNA FINTA". Nexos. 1 December 1982. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  13. ^ Badillo, Diego (11 August 2018). "Manuel Bartlett Díaz, el hombre del sistema que está de regreso". El Economista. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  14. ^ Ortiz de Zárate, Roberto. "Carlos Salinas de Gortari". Barcelona Centre for International Affairs. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  15. ^ Ramos, Martinez & Ramírez. (1988). Salinas de Gortari: Candidato de la crisis. Plaza y Valdés Editores. p. 168. ISBN 968-856-128-2.
  16. ^ Ramos, Martinez & Ramírez. (1988). Salinas de Gortari: Candidato de la crisis. Plaza y Valdés Editores. p. 171. ISBN 968-856-128-2.
  17. ^ "MIGUEL DE LA MADRID VISTO DE LEJOS, O DE COMO LA PRENSA INTERNACIONAL SE FUE CON MAS DE UNA FINTA". Nexos. 1 December 1982. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  18. ^ Ramos, Martinez & Ramírez. (1988). Salinas de Gortari: Candidato de la crisis. Plaza y Valdés Editores. p. 168. ISBN 968-856-128-2.
  19. ^ Hurtado, Miguel de la Madrid; Nolan], [James (1982). "Miguel de la Madrid on Population Policy in Mexico". Population and Development Review. 8 (2): 435–438. doi:10.2307/1973019. JSTOR 1973019. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  20. ^ Ramos, Martinez & Ramírez. (1988). Salinas de Gortari: Candidato de la crisis. Plaza y Valdés Editores. p. 176. ISBN 968-856-128-2.
  21. ^ Ramos, Martinez & Ramírez. (1988). Salinas de Gortari: Candidato de la crisis. Plaza y Valdés Editores. p. 176. ISBN 968-856-128-2.
  22. ^ Ceberio, Jesús (30 June 1982). "La campaña electoral más dura y costosa que se recuerda". El País. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  23. ^ Arvide, Isabel (1987). Al final del túnel (Second ed.). Jean Sidaner, Editor. p. 22. ISBN 968-402-009-0.
  24. ^ Woldenberg, José. "Hace 25 años, Zócalo Rojo". Retrieved 16 September 2021.
  25. ^ Encinas Rodríguez, Alejandro. Ciudad de México: Memoria de siete siglos. p. 126.[ISBN missing]
  26. ^ John J. Bailey (1988) Governing Mexico: The Statecraft of Crisis Management, p174
  27. ^ "Así era México en las elecciones pasadas (desde 1982)". Nación321 (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  28. ^ "Excerpt from López Portillo's final Address to Congress (1 September 1982)". YouTube. Retrieved 30 April 2022.
  29. ^ De la Madrid Hurtado, Miguel (2004). Cambio de rumbo. Fondo de Cultura Económica. p. 31. ISBN 968-16-7209-7.
  30. ^ De la Madrid Hurtado, Miguel (2004). Cambio de rumbo. Fondo de Cultura Económica. pp. 27–36. ISBN 968-16-7209-7.
  31. ^ "SESIÓN DE CÁMARA Y DE COLEGIO ELECTORAL". Diario de los Debates de la Cámara de Diputados de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos. 9 September 1982. Retrieved 25 October 2021.

1982, mexican, general, election, general, elections, were, held, mexico, july, 1982, presidential, elections, were, miguel, madrid, received, vote, chamber, deputies, election, institutional, revolutionary, party, seats, well, winning, seats, senate, election. General elections were held in Mexico on 4 July 1982 1 The presidential elections were won by Miguel de la Madrid who received 74 of the vote In the Chamber of Deputies election the Institutional Revolutionary Party won 299 of the 372 seats 2 as well as winning 63 of the 64 seats in the Senate election 3 Voter turnout was 75 in the presidential election and 73 and 66 for the two parts of the Chamber elections 4 1982 Mexican general election 1976 4 July 1982 1988 Presidential election Nominee Miguel de la Madrid Pablo Emilio MaderoParty PRI PANHome state Colima CoahuilaPopular vote 16 748 006 3 700 045Percentage 74 31 16 42 Votes for De la Madrid by state 90 100 80 90 70 80 60 70 50 60 President before electionJose Lopez PortilloPRI Elected President Miguel de la MadridPRIRosario Ibarra who was nominated presidential candidate by the Revolutionary Workers Party was the first woman ever to run for president in a Mexican election These would be the last of the symbolic non competitive presidential elections in which the PRI in power since 1929 and its presidential candidate faced no serious opposition and won by a huge margin Contents 1 Background 2 Designation of the PRI presidential candidate 3 Campaign and economic crisis 4 Results 4 1 President 4 1 1 By state 4 2 Senate 4 3 Chamber of Deputies 5 Aftermath 6 Notes 7 ReferencesBackground EditThe previous presidential elections celebrated in 1976 had featured only one presidential candidate Jose Lopez Portillo The lack of any opposition in that election raised serious doubts nationally and internationally regarding the legitimacy of the Mexican political system under the PRI which had been in power since 1929 5 Due to this a political reform was passed in 1977 which allowed many more parties to compete in federal elections notoriously including the decades old Mexican Communist Party which until then had been barred from participating in elections as well as providing better representation for opposition parties in the Chamber of the Deputies 6 As a result nine political parties were able to participate in the 1982 elections In the presidential election there were seven registered candidates which at the time was the biggest number of candidates registered in a presidential election and was a stark contrast with the single candidate election of 1976 Nonetheless these proved to be rather cosmetic changes as the PRI continued to be the dominant party and practices of vote buying and electoral fraud remained widespread It wasn t until the mid to late 80 s that the PRI began to face real challenges at the state and federal levels by opposition parties particularly by the PAN and the PRD Designation of the PRI presidential candidate EditBy 1981 the officials that were perceived by the public opinion as having the most possibilities of being chosen by Lopez Portillo to succeed him in the Presidency were Jorge Diaz Serrano Director General of PEMEX Miguel de la Madrid Secretary of Programming and the Budget and Javier Garcia Paniagua National President of the PRI Among them initially Diaz Serrano was apparently the most favoured to obtain the presidential candidacy being a long time friend of Lopez Portillo and enjoying the popularity that came with the financial boom that the country had enjoyed in those years due to the high international oil prices and the discovery and development of new oil fields during Diaz Serrano s tenure in PEMEX as Mexico had become one of the main oil exporters in previous years a famous phrase in this respect was said by President Lopez Portillo in August 1977 when he stated that the country should become used to administering the abundance 7 However in June 1981 the international oil prices plummeted and Diaz Serrano without the authorization of the economic cabinet consequently announced that Mexico would lower the prices of its oil by 4 dollars The controversy unleashed by Diaz Serrano s decision resulted in his resignation as Director General of PEMEX and with it the end of his presidential aspirations In this manner the two serious contenders that remained were Garcia Paniagua and De la Madrid Garcia Paniagua son of General Marcelino Garcia Barragan was a faithful reflection of the post revolutionary political elite and was identified with the populist sector which was more inclined to uphold the discourse of the Mexican Revolution and to continue Lopez Portillo s general policies 8 In contrast De la Madrid who had a post graduate degree in Public Administration from Harvard University was perceived as a skilled technocrat mainly recognized for the elaboration of the Global Development Plan which was announced in April 1980 and was intended to guide the planning of the economic policy of the Lopez Portillo government The fall in the oil prices in June 1981 radically altered the national scene and the process of the selection of the PRI presidential candidate took place while an increasingly serious economic crisis was taking over the nation The uncertainty threatened with paralysing the public administration so Lopez Portillo was forced to announce ahead of time a on 25 September the chosen person to succeed him as President of the Republic Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado 9 The selection of De la Madrid was mainly due to the fact that in the middle of the crisis which was beginning to wreak havoc in the national economy Lopez Portillo considered that his Secretary of Programming and the Budget was the best man to face the situation because of his administrative skill particularly due to his elaboration of the aforementioned Global Development Plan 10 As De la Madrid himself would latter recount Garcia Paniagua s reaction at not having been the chosen one was particularly aggressive and so he was replaced in the Presidency of the PRI by Pedro Ojeda Paullada a couple of weeks after the announcement 11 The designation of De la Madrid aroused significant opposition from inside the party specially from its more traditional sectors since the candidate was perceived as a conservative technocrat with no political skill in fact just like Lopez Portillo before him De la Madrid had never held a popularly elected post at the time of his nomination as presidential candidate One of those dissatisfied was the old leader of the CTM Fidel Velazquez who had reportedly favoured Garcia Paniagua In contrast the announcement of De la Madrid s candidacy was well received by the banking community and the private sector which was reflected by a 10 point increase in the Mexican Stock Exchange the day of his nomination 12 In spite of the initial hostility by many sectors inside the PRI in the end De la Madrid manage to consolidate his position and to gather the support of his party agglutinating the so called cargada priista around himself Campaign and economic crisis EditAfter being nominated as presidential pre candidate De la Madrid appointed Manuel Bartlett Diaz as General Coordinator of his campaign 13 while he entrusted the direction of the PRI s Institute of Political Economic and Social Studies IEPES to his old collaborator from the Secretariat of Programming and the Budget Carlos Salinas de Gortari 14 In practice Bartlett acted as the Political chief of the campaign and Salinas de Gortari was its Economic chief 15 1981 and 1982 were particularly difficult years for the Mexican economy At the time of De la Madrid s nomination in September 1981 the public finances of the nation had already begun to experience the first ravages as a consequence of the fall in oil prices in June Nonetheless at first the discourse of De la Madrid s campaign while not denying the crisis preferred to focus on other subjects and didn t deviate significantly from the traditional nationalist and revolutionary tone of previous PRI campaigns De la Madrid proposed seven central theses as the centrepiece of his campaign Revolutionary nationalism integral democratization egalitarian society decentralization of the national life development employment and fight against inflation democratic planning and the most famous of them all moral renovation of the society 16 The latter which emphasised stopping and fighting government corruption had a particular impact on voters since the Lopez Portillo administration had been mired in grave corruption scandals at all levels involving officials appointed by the President the more infamous cases were those of Arturo Durazo Moreno aka El Negro Durazo Jorge Diaz Serrano and Carlos Hank Gonzalez and even members of the president s family many of whom also held government positions during his presidency In this context according to a poll from October 1981 70 of the population considered that corruption in Mexico had reached gigantic levels 17 As the months passed the economy continued to deteriorate from September 1981 to January 1982 capital flight and distrust of the national economy skyrocketed On 5 January 1982 the government urged people to avoid the waste of gasoline warning that otherwise it would have to impose rationing In February the Lopez Portillo government was forced to devalue the peso leaving it at an exchange rate of 46 pesos per US dollar By then the government had already lost 3 000 million dollars from its international reserves 18 In spite of this first devaluation speculation and capital flight did not cease inflation continued rising and the government had to adjust the public tariffs At a campaign stop at Villahermosa De la Madrid hinted at legalizing abortion stating that as the rate of population growth increases scarce resources and I refer here to resources generally not only economic resources fail to keep pace with that growth and addressed the necessity of discussing issues such as respect for the freedom not only of the couple but especially of women with a view to giving them truly free choices and protecting their health explicitly referring to the topic of abortion a delicate matter to deal with but one that has been touched upon here because it is a topic that society cannot disregard 19 In March as a concession to the PRI candidate Lopez Portillo made some changes in his cabinet and appointed Jesus Silva Herzog Flores and Miguel Mancera Aguayo both close to De la Madrid as Secretary of the Treasury and Director of the Bank of Mexico respectively As the economic crisis worsened the De la Madrid campaign began to adopt a more realist tone In a speech delivered by the candidate on 24 May 1982 at Leon Guanajuato De la Madrid advocated a profound program that included fighting inflation and currency volatility he committed to avoiding a recession and protecting employment and he finally expressed his rejection of populism and any form of demagogy 20 Many commenters pointed out that De la Madrid himself as Secretary of Programming and the Budget and as the author of the Global Development Plan in 1980 which had not anticipated a fall in the oil prices and whose mechanisms turned out to be insufficient to deal with the subsequent disaster was to some extent responsible for the economic crisis 21 A poster from the De la Madrid campaign A sticker from the Pablo Emilio Madero PAN campaign Buttons from the De la Madrid campaign The PRI was criticized for the high cost of the official campaign in spite of the nation s critical financial situation In defense De la Madrid stated that We could have saved lots of money focusing the campaign on TV and radio but the Mexican idiosyncrasy demands that the people meet their candidate and have the opportunity to convey their problems to him and that he preferred the cost of political campaigns to the cost of the repression that dictatorial regimes carry with them 22 De la Madrid made an extensive tour of the national territory as was the tradition for Priista presidential candidates journalist Isabel Arvide who was sent by El Sol de Mexico to cover the campaign stated that De la Madrid toured more than 114 000 kilometers on his campaign 23 On 19 June the Unified Socialist Party of Mexico PSUM carried out the closing campaign rally of its presidential candidate Arnoldo Martinez Verdugo at the Zocalo in Mexico City The event was of particular importance both for it being the first opposition demonstration to be held at the Zocalo in 14 years since the student protests and the subsequent Tlatelolco Massacre in 1968 the government had barred opposition organizations from using the compound and for the relatively big assistance that it had with many thousands of PSUM sympathizers joining that day The event was remembered by the press as the Red Zocalo 24 25 In spite of the worsening economic crisis and the corruption scandals of the Lopez Portillo administration the PRI held a lead in opinion polls and as it had always happened since it took power in 1929 its candidate was the eventual winner of the election by a large margin as the opposition remained divided and none of its candidates had enough political strength to effectively challenge De la Madrid and the massive political apparatus of the PRI De la Madrid s aforementioned proposal of Moral renovation of the society was also credited as a reason for his decisive victory as voters hoped that the austere reserved candidate would indeed make a serious effort to finally curb corruption in Mexico In addition De la Madrid was able to distance himself from Lopez Portillo and to project himself as a serious hard working technocrat who was the perfect antidote for the social and economic disaster left by his predecessor Results EditPresident Edit CandidatePartyVotes Miguel de la MadridPRI PARM PPS16 748 00674 31Pablo Emilio MaderoNational Action Party3 700 04516 42Arnoldo Martinez VerdugoUnified Socialist Party of Mexico821 9953 65Ignacio Gonzalez GollazMexican Democratic Party433 8861 93Rosario IbarraWorkers Revolutionary Party416 4481 85Candido Diaz CerecedoSocialist Party of the Workers342 0051 52Manuel Moreno SanchezSocial Democratic Party48 4130 21Non registered candidates28 4740 13Total22 539 272100 00Valid votes22 539 27295 53Invalid blank votes1 053 6164 47Total votes23 592 888100 00Registered voters turnout31 526 38674 84Source NohlenBy state Edit The results by state were validated by the Chamber of Deputies in the same session as the national level results despite several differences State De la Madrid PRI PARM PPS Madero PAN Martinez Verdugo PSUM Gonzalez Gollas PDM Ibarra PRT Diaz Cerecedo PST Moreno PSD Unregistered candidates Null votes TotalVotes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Aguascalientes 139 796 70 24 31 570 15 86 1 879 0 94 3 122 1 56 1 300 0 65 4 009 2 01 345 0 17 33 0 01 16 967 8 52 199 021Baja California 287 673 53 92 147 092 27 57 16 456 3 08 6 298 1 18 12 403 2 32 11 047 2 07 1 149 0 21 346 0 06 50 996 9 55 533 460Baja California Sur 66 048 72 78 13 852 15 26 2 336 2 57 537 0 59 3 444 3 79 763 0 84 124 0 13 23 0 02 3 617 3 98 90 744Campeche 104 416 84 05 8 052 6 48 898 0 72 401 0 32 333 0 27 419 0 34 52 0 04 29 0 02 9 631 7 75 124 231Chiapas 691 983 91 88 21 043 2 79 7 745 1 02 1 436 0 19 4 958 0 65 8 848 1 17 1 109 0 14 762 0 10 15206 2 01 753 090Chihuahua 372 284 62 02 153 704 25 61 13 157 2 19 4 719 0 79 2 813 0 47 5 169 0 86 740 0 12 67 0 01 47 626 7 93 600 279Coahuila 228 687 68 27 86 155 25 72 4 770 1 42 996 0 30 2 334 0 70 6 581 1 96 351 0 10 292 0 09 4 806 1 43 334 972Colima 137 371 89 20 7 126 4 63 1 331 0 86 2 009 1 30 737 0 48 1 788 1 16 82 0 05 19 0 01 3 534 2 29 153 997Durango 288 810 76 50 67 159 17 79 7 619 2 02 2 732 0 72 280 0 07 2 453 0 65 413 0 11 12 0 003 14 926 2 89 517 341Federal District 1 977 179 51 79 892 214 23 37 286 661 7 51 90 003 2 36 199 963 5 24 81 817 2 14 18 702 0 49 10 779 0 28 260 092 6 81 3 817 410Guanajuato 592 644 66 65 178 468 20 07 10 755 1 21 61 125 6 87 3 063 0 34 12 214 1 37 1 154 0 13 76 0 01 29 716 3 34 889 215Guerrero 430 840 83 28 22 392 4 33 20 798 4 02 5 667 1 10 6 524 1 26 15 583 3 01 594 0 11 17 0 003 14 926 2 89 517 341Hidalgo 499 123 86 45 50 641 8 77 8 876 1 54 2 998 0 52 4 806 0 83 10 289 1 78 537 0 09 0 0 107 0 02 577 377Jalisco 840 804 58 52 359 328 25 01 89 946 6 26 49 284 3 43 6 691 0 47 12 122 0 84 2 248 0 16 112 0 01 76 308 5 31 1 436 843Michoacan 611 252 76 79 90 201 11 33 16 774 2 11 34 978 4 39 5 106 0 64 7 524 0 95 723 0 09 87 0 01 29 380 3 69 796 025State of Mexico 1 553 624 57 83 606 668 22 58 137 571 5 12 67 423 2 51 91 453 3 40 40 497 1 51 7 643 0 28 851 0 03 180 793 6 73 2 686 523Morelos 256 063 75 86 33 673 9 98 8 587 2 54 4 754 1 41 15 142 4 49 6 514 1 93 644 0 19 44 0 01 12 116 3 59 337 537Nayarit 161 561 78 77 6 833 3 33 22 577 11 01 2 013 0 98 708 0 35 1 106 0 54 160 0 08 48 0 02 10 103 4 93 205 109Nuevo Leon 642 648 72 96 213 606 24 25 4 494 0 51 2 984 0 34 3 973 0 45 3 615 0 41 853 0 10 39 0 004 8 653 0 98 880 865Oaxaca 676 410 88 20 46 185 6 02 20 908 2 73 2 296 0 30 4 948 0 65 4 467 0 58 580 0 08 58 0 01 11 057 1 44 766 909Puebla 1 109 871 78 23 135 615 9 56 25 668 1 81 8 455 0 60 9 575 0 67 8 802 0 62 1 209 0 09 126 0 01 119 393 8 42 1 418 714Queretaro 200 118 76 08 40 518 15 40 3 439 1 31 4 543 1 73 1 267 0 48 1 429 0 54 467 0 18 18 0 01 11 222 4 27 263 021Quintana Roo 89 361 92 52 3 513 3 64 896 0 93 247 0 26 302 0 31 845 0 87 65 0 07 15 0 02 1 343 1 39 96 587San Luis Potosi 415 999 83 22 41 171 8 24 3 907 0 78 21 209 4 24 2 389 0 48 4 149 0 83 710 0 14 49 0 01 10 321 2 06 499 904Sinaloa 489 280 79 57 65 035 10 58 31 947 5 20 2 713 0 44 5 374 0 87 4 596 0 75 827 0 13 48 0 01 15 112 2 46 614 932Sonora 426 648 74 79 113 166 19 84 6 759 1 18 1 688 0 30 4 759 0 83 1 215 0 21 742 0 13 152 0 03 15 335 2 69 570 464Tabasco 315 340 93 00 11 706 3 45 2 129 0 63 645 0 19 1 045 0 31 2 921 0 86 207 0 06 9 0 003 5 080 1 50 339 082Tamaulipas 514 472 83 00 60 663 9 79 8 219 1 33 6 293 1 02 3 311 0 53 3 917 0 63 958 0 15 53 0 01 21 960 3 54 619 846Tlaxcala 190 754 81 38 21 890 9 34 3 897 1 66 10 035 4 28 1 048 0 45 836 0 36 139 0 06 35 0 01 5 758 2 46 234 392Veracruz 1 787 317 85 89 69 622 3 35 43 769 2 10 29 187 1 40 14 017 0 67 73 672 3 54 4 569 0 22 14 246 0 68 44 492 2 14 2 080 891Yucatan 271 844 81 21 59 275 17 71 322 0 10 389 0 12 947 0 28 411 0 12 141 0 04 4 0 001 1 395 0 42 334 728Zacatecas 350 986 85 15 39 859 9 67 6 903 1 67 2 707 0 66 1 435 0 35 1 587 0 39 176 0 04 25 0 01 8 518 2 07 412 196Total 16 721 206 70 96 3 697 995 15 69 821 993 3 49 433 886 1 84 416 448 1 77 341 205 1 45 48 413 0 21 28 474 0 12 1 053 616 4 47 23 563 236Source CEDE taken from the 9 September 1982 session of the Mexican Chamber of DeputiesSenate Edit PartyVotes Seats Institutional Revolutionary Party14 574 11470 6063 1National Action Party3 678 09617 8200Unified Socialist Party of Mexico866 3014 200NewMexican Democratic Party438 4712 120NewPopular Socialist Party375 0591 821 1Socialist Party of the Workers320 6721 550NewWorkers Revolutionary Party221 4211 070NewAuthentic Party of the Mexican Revolution153 4950 740NewSocial Democratic Party2 9660 010NewNon registered candidates11 5390 0600Total20 642 134100 00640Valid votes20 642 13492 06Invalid blank votes1 780 3337 94Total votes22 422 467100 00Registered voters turnout31 520 88471 14Source Nohlen Gomez TagleChamber of Deputies Edit PartyParty listConstituencyTotalseats Votes SeatsVotes SeatsInstitutional Revolutionary Party14 289 79365 71014 501 98869 36299299 3National Action Party3 786 34817 41503 663 84617 52151 8Unified Socialist Party of Mexico932 2144 2917914 3654 37017NewMexican Democratic Party534 1222 4612475 0992 27012 2Popular Socialist Party459 3032 1110395 0061 89010 1Socialist Party of the Workers428 1531 9711372 6791 78011 1Workers Revolutionary Party308 0991 420264 6321 2700NewAuthentic Party of the Mexican Revolution282 0041 300282 9711 3500 12Social Democratic Party53 3060 25038 9940 1900NewNon registered candidates671 9993 0901080 00 00Total21 745 341100 0010020 909 688100 003004000Valid votes21 745 34195 1020 909 68899 95Invalid blank votes1 121 3784 9010 1920 05Total votes22 866 719100 0020 919 880100 00Registered voters turnout31 516 37072 5631 520 88466 37Source Nohlen Bailey 26 Aftermath EditThe increase in voter turnout which was of 74 82 according to official figures was widely celebrated by the government as an advance against abstentionism In spite of it and of the positive result for the PRI the economic condition continued to deteriorate In August the country declared a moratorium on its foreign debt and the peso suffered another devaluation remaining at an exchange rate of around 70 pesos per US dollar Towards the end of the year it had further fallen to 149 pesos per dollar which meant that the accumulated devaluation in 1982 was of 470 27 The discredit of Lopez Portillo near the end of his presidency amid the severe economic crisis and the monumental corruption scandals which involved members of his government and his family had no precedent in the recent memory of the nation The situation was such that on 1 September 1982 during his final Address to the Congress President Lopez Portillo asked for forgiveness from the nation s poor for having failed to improve their condition as he shed some tears 28 In the same Address to the Congress Lopez Portillo decreed the nationalization of the banks and a generalized exchange control These measures taken only three months before his term was set to end caused serious differences between Lopez Portillo and President elect De la Madrid who had expressed his complete disagreement with the measures and would later write that it implied a severe lack of respect for me and a suspicion that the President intended to condition my government 29 The relationship between the two became more distant in the following months as De la Madrid perceived that Lopez Portillo through his son Jose Ramon was trying to exercise too much power for an outgoing President and that he was trying to overshadow the President elect 30 The National Action Party PAN which had nominated Pablo Emilio Madero as its presidential candidate claimed that there had been many irregularities in the election such as an unrestricted use of public resources in favor of the PRI candidates emptying of electoral rolls stuffing of ballot boxes and that many ballots with votes for Madero and other opposition candidates had been thrown into the garbage by PRI officials while they didn t go so far as to dispute that De la Madrid had indeed won the PAN argued that the margin of victory of the PRI candidate had been artificially inflated and that Madero had obtained at least 4 million votes With these arguments in the 9 September session of the Chamber of Deputies the PAN voted against the ruling which officially declared De la Madrid as President elect 31 Notes Edit Generally the so called destape uncovering which was the announcement by the PRI of the person chosen by the President to succeed him would take place in October or November of the year prior to the presidential elections References Edit Dieter Nohlen 2005 Elections in the Americas A data handbook Volume I p 453 ISBN 978 0 19 928357 6 Nohlen p468 Nohlen p470 Nohlen p454 Riding Alan 13 June 1976 Mexico elects a symbol The New York Times Retrieved 27 June 2020 G T Silvia 2001 La transicion inconclusa treinta anos de elecciones en Mexico p 35 ISBN 968 12 1042 5 Beltran del Rio Pascal 22 April 2020 Petroleo la maldicion Excelsior Retrieved 27 August 2021 Ramos Martinez amp Ramirez 1988 Salinas de Gortari Candidato de la crisis Plaza y Valdes Editores p 166 ISBN 968 856 128 2 Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado es el precandidato a la Presidencia El Informador EXC AEE 25 September 1981 Retrieved 27 August 2021 Ramos Martinez amp Ramirez 1988 Salinas de Gortari Candidato de la crisis Plaza y Valdes Editores pp 164 165 ISBN 968 856 128 2 De la Madrid Hurtado Miguel 2004 Cambio de rumbo Fondo de Cultura Economica pp 24 25 ISBN 968 16 7209 7 MIGUEL DE LA MADRID VISTO DE LEJOS O DE COMO LA PRENSA INTERNACIONAL SE FUE CON MAS DE UNA FINTA Nexos 1 December 1982 Retrieved 27 August 2021 Badillo Diego 11 August 2018 Manuel Bartlett Diaz el hombre del sistema que esta de regreso El Economista Retrieved 24 August 2021 Ortiz de Zarate Roberto Carlos Salinas de Gortari Barcelona Centre for International Affairs Retrieved 24 August 2021 Ramos Martinez amp Ramirez 1988 Salinas de Gortari Candidato de la crisis Plaza y Valdes Editores p 168 ISBN 968 856 128 2 Ramos Martinez amp Ramirez 1988 Salinas de Gortari Candidato de la crisis Plaza y Valdes Editores p 171 ISBN 968 856 128 2 MIGUEL DE LA MADRID VISTO DE LEJOS O DE COMO LA PRENSA INTERNACIONAL SE FUE CON MAS DE UNA FINTA Nexos 1 December 1982 Retrieved 24 August 2021 Ramos Martinez amp Ramirez 1988 Salinas de Gortari Candidato de la crisis Plaza y Valdes Editores p 168 ISBN 968 856 128 2 Hurtado Miguel de la Madrid Nolan James 1982 Miguel de la Madrid on Population Policy in Mexico Population and Development Review 8 2 435 438 doi 10 2307 1973019 JSTOR 1973019 Retrieved 1 September 2022 Ramos Martinez amp Ramirez 1988 Salinas de Gortari Candidato de la crisis Plaza y Valdes Editores p 176 ISBN 968 856 128 2 Ramos Martinez amp Ramirez 1988 Salinas de Gortari Candidato de la crisis Plaza y Valdes Editores p 176 ISBN 968 856 128 2 Ceberio Jesus 30 June 1982 La campana electoral mas dura y costosa que se recuerda El Pais Retrieved 24 August 2021 Arvide Isabel 1987 Al final del tunel Second ed Jean Sidaner Editor p 22 ISBN 968 402 009 0 Woldenberg Jose Hace 25 anos Zocalo Rojo Retrieved 16 September 2021 Encinas Rodriguez Alejandro Ciudad de Mexico Memoria de siete siglos p 126 ISBN missing John J Bailey 1988 Governing Mexico The Statecraft of Crisis Management p174 Asi era Mexico en las elecciones pasadas desde 1982 Nacion321 in Mexican Spanish Retrieved 17 June 2021 Excerpt from Lopez Portillo s final Address to Congress 1 September 1982 YouTube Retrieved 30 April 2022 De la Madrid Hurtado Miguel 2004 Cambio de rumbo Fondo de Cultura Economica p 31 ISBN 968 16 7209 7 De la Madrid Hurtado Miguel 2004 Cambio de rumbo Fondo de Cultura Economica pp 27 36 ISBN 968 16 7209 7 SESIoN DE CAMARA Y DE COLEGIO ELECTORAL Diario de los Debates de la Camara de Diputados de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos 9 September 1982 Retrieved 25 October 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1982 Mexican general election amp oldid 1123870014, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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