IRAPUATO, Mexico — Tens of thousands of people packed a stadium in a violence-torn western Mexico state while even more did so in Mexico City’s central square Friday as the country’s leading presidential candidates officially kicked off their campaigns with promises of greater security and support for the outgoing president’s social programs.
Former Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s chosen successor, drew a multitude of supporters to the heart of the capital who expressed a desire to see her continue her mentor’s policies.
In Irapuato, Guanajuato, the country’s homicide capital, there was no greater priority than improving security.
Opposition coalition candidate Xóchitl Gálvez launched an aggressive attack on López Obrador’s security policies Friday and said voters would have a clear choice of continuing on the same path or electing her to take a much more aggressive approach to securing the nation.
Malena Gómez, an Irapuato resident and activist with a civic group, said safety was her biggest concern.
“Here in Guanajuato and in the entire country,” she said. “This Morena government (of López Obrador) allowed organized crime to get into everything.”
Organized crime has long controlled swaths of Mexico through violence and corruption. It has diversified beyond drug trafficking in recent years, extorting businesses big and small for protection payments.
Farmer Amadeo Hernández Barajas, who grows corn and beans on his farm in Acambaro, Guanajuato, said he supported Gálvez because Sheinbaum just promised to be more of the same. He said farmers are also targets of organized crime.
“How do you get the product out?” he asked. “Because the criminals charge you for every ton of corn you take out and they charge the combines and harvesters too.”
He said the reliance on the military, which López Obrador, as well as his predecessors, used against the heavily armed cartels hasn’t worked. “What are soldiers and National Guard in the streets worth if they don’t do anything, just put up yellow tape after something happened?”
But López Obrador enjoys high popularity, largely because of his extensive social spending that has benefitted his low-income base and efforts to target corruption.
Those are the programs that Sheinbaum has promised to extend.
Gabriel Ruiz, holding a silhouette of Sheinbaum, said “we have to continue with what we have.”
“I’ve liked this government and that it has tried to eradicate corruption and that it’s with the people,” said the 54-year-old teacher.
He expected Sheinbaum to continue López Obrador’s security policies, but noted that no administration has managed to contain organized crime. “There has always been violence,” he said.
Sheinbaum has maintained a comfortable lead over Gálvez in polling. The race’s third candidate is Jorge Álvarez Máynez of the smaller Citizen Movement party. The 38-year-old launched his campaign in Lagos de Moreno, Jalisco Friday.
But it is highly likely that Mexico will elect its first woman as president June 2.
That excited Dante Robles, a 24-year-old student, though he hoped it would be Sheinbaum “to take away the privileges of the business owners.”
“There are a lot of business owners who don’t even pay taxes and are protected by politicians from the conservative regime,” he said.
Earlier Friday, Gálvez got a jump on the campaign, holding an event in the violence-torn central state of Zacatecas just after midnight. The former senator and tech entrepreneur said that under her leadership “hugs for criminals are over; they will face the law.”
That was a play on López Obrador’s shorthand for his security strategy “hugs, not bullets,” which steered resources to social problems at the root of violence.
Four Mexican soldiers were killed by a land min e in the state of Michoacan, López Obrador confirmed Friday. The president called it a “trap” likely set by a cartel.
The soldiers inspecting a camp on the outskirts of Aguililla Thursday when an anti-personnel mine was triggered.
On Monday, gunmen killed two mayoral hopefuls in the Michoacan town of Maravatio within hours of each other, the latest signal of organized crime’s willingness to engage in local elections.
Gálvez posed the choice as: “continuing on the same path which would mean giving in to crime or fighting to defend families, to defend the youth, to defend those who work.”
In places like Zacatecas and neighboring Guanajuato, Gálvez’s heavy handed security approach could sway voters terrorized by warring drug cartels.
She promised to double the size of the National Guard that López Obrador created to 300,000, but put it under civilian leadership. She also proposed closer collaboration with the United States to confront a “common enemy” in the cartels.
“There will not be a more important priority than Mexicans’ safety,” Gálvez said.
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