Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, University of Wollongong
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- Messenger
A landslide victory over three opponents with 53 percent of the vote over 30 million Mexicans voted for Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in the country’s July 1 presidential election, handing the former Mexico City mayor.
Lopez Obrador’s agenda – to root down corruption, reduce violence, reconsider Mexico’s fuel and power policy, welcome migrants and spur development in impoverished areas – is ambitious in this usually conservative Latin nation that is american.
Lopez Obrador has run for president twice for a comparable platform, in 2006 and 2012. Both times were lost by him.
To win this present year, Lopez Obrador’s young Morena celebration joined up with forces with a few smaller events from both right and kept to build a victorious but strange coalition that is electoral “Juntos Haremos Historia, ” or Together We’ll Make History. Continue reading