MEXICO CITY — Political assassinations, kidnappings and threats have cast a pall over upcoming regional elections in which the ruling party is stressing its efforts to control violence as it seeks to consolidate power.
MEXICO CITY — Political assassinations, kidnappings and threats have cast a pall over upcoming regional elections in which the ruling party is stressing its efforts to control violence as it seeks to consolidate power.
Authorities reported that a mayoral candidate in Durango state was shot to death Monday by unknown assailants, his body dumped on a roadside, after he had been kidnapped at a funeral.
Over the weekend, gunmen pumped more than 25 rounds into a car carrying Rosalia Palma, a candidate for state legislature in Oaxaca. Her husband and niece, who worked on Palma’s campaign, were killed and the candidate wounded. On June 12, a candidate for mayor in Chihuahua state was slain by armed men who seized him from his home.
Other mayoral and local legislative candidates as well as party officials have reported being attacked, their homes being shot up or receiving threats in the run-up to Sunday’s elections in 14 states. Victims have come from all of the major political parties.
The elections correspond to roughly a third of the Mexican electorate and are the first to take place since Enrique Pena Nieto led his Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, back to the presidency in December after a 12-year hiatus. The PRI had previously ruled virtually unchallenged for seven decades.
One major exception to the PRI’s long rule was the state of Baja California, which in 1989 elected a governor from the conservative National Action Party, or PAN, the first time in modern Mexican history that an opposition party took a state’s highest office.
The PAN has controlled the Baja statehouse ever since. But polls indicate that the PRI may finally regain the long-elusive post on Sunday, when voters select a governor in the state bordering California. It would be a major blow to the PAN, which is reeling from a series of electoral defeats and internal power struggles.
Violence typically surges before elections in Mexico, but the recent incidents seem to be part of a wider wave of killings, kidnappings and other crimes that challenge the government’s claims to have improved security since returning to power.
A leading civic group released a report last week that showed that kidnappings, far from decreasing, have soared to the highest level in years. Pena Nieto has placed a stronger emphasis on reducing crime, including killings and kidnappings, than on fighting drug cartels. His government vigorously disputed the group’s findings.
The organization, the National Citizens Observatory for Security and Justice, said homicides and other major crimes were declining slightly, continuing a trend that started a year and a half ago.
A survey released Tuesday by the state statistical institute said the public’s perception of safety improved in June compared with the same month last year. But the survey also showed that public confidence in security, while not as low as in 2012, has declined since December.
Some experts say any public perception of improvement has less to do with real peace and more to do with the government’s decision to discourage the reporting or publicizing of violent acts.
Gustavo Madero, national head of the PAN, said this week that the major parties had bowed to a government request to keep security issues out of the election.
“There is a pact … a gentleman’s agreement, not to use security issues in the campaigns,” Madero said. He also charged that scores of complaints of campaign irregularities made by his party had gone ignored, undercutting the fairness of several races.
Election-season violence comes from drug-trafficking gangs seeking to control elected officials as well as local political bosses who also seek to strong-arm candidates and buy off voters.
The slaying of the son of a campaign manager in Sinaloa prompted two candidates to withdraw from a local race there, and other campaigns have been suspended.
Jesus Zambrano, national head of the leftist Democratic Revolution Party, denounced what he called “hot spots” in nearly all the states where elections will be held and where candidates or their families are in danger.
“These politically tinged aggressions must not continue,” he said. “It is the unavoidable responsibility of the authorities to act, prevent and punish these actions to avoid allowing impunity to be the norm.”