1997 Mexican legislative election explained

Country:Mexico
Previous Election:1994
Election Date:6 July 1997
Next Election:2000
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Election Name:Chamber of Deputies
Seats For Election:All 500 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
Leader1:Humberto Roque Villanueva
Party1:Institutional Revolutionary Party
Last Election1:300
Seats1:239
Percentage1:39.09
Leader2:Felipe Calderón
Party2:National Action Party (Mexico)
Last Election2:119
Seats2:121
Percentage2:26.64
Leader3:Andrés Manuel López Obrador
Party3:Party of the Democratic Revolution
Last Election3:71
Seats3:125
Percentage3:25.69
Leader4:Jorge González Torres
Party4:Ecologist Green Party of Mexico
Last Election4:0
Seats4:8
Percentage4:3.81
Leader5:Alberto Anaya
Party5:Labour Party (Mexico)
Last Election5:10
Seats5:7
Percentage5:2.58
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Election Name:Senate
Seats For Election:32 of the 128 seats in the Senate of the Republic
Leader1:Humberto Roque Villanueva
Party1:Institutional Revolutionary Party
Last Election1:95
Seats1:76
Percentage1:38.48
Leader7:Felipe Calderón
Party7:National Action Party (Mexico)
Last Election7:25
Seats7:33
Percentage7:26.92
Party8:Party of the Democratic Revolution
Last Election8:8
Seats8:14
Percentage8:25.83
Leader9:Jorge González Torres
Party9:Ecologist Green Party of Mexico
Last Election9:0
Seats9:1
Percentage9:4.03
Leader10:Alberto Anaya
Party10:Labour Party (Mexico)
Last Election10:0
Seats10:1
Percentage10:2.55
Leader11:
Party11:Independents
Last Election11:0
Seats11:3
Percentage11:

Legislative elections were held in Mexico on 6 July 1997.[1] The Institutional Revolutionary Party won 239 of the 500 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, the first time it had failed to win a majority. As a result, the leaders of the Party of the Democratic Revolution and of the National Action Party were able to control Congress and installed PRD member Porfirio Muñoz Ledo as the president of the Chamber of Deputies. At first, the PRI refused to accept the nomination and its parliamentary leader, Arturo Núñez Jiménez, declared it illegal. However, the PRI later accepted the fact and Muñoz Ledo answered the state of the union address of President Ernesto Zedillo.

The Party of the Cardenist Front of National Reconstruction (PFCRN), Popular Socialist Party (PSP) and Mexican Democratic Party (PDM) all lost their legal registration and disappeared, while the Labor Party (PT) and the Ecologist Green Party of Mexico (PVEM) consolidated their support, which turned them into parties who could form coalition governments. Voter turnout was between 57% and 58%.[2]

Background

The political landscape saw great change in the years preceding the 1997 midterm elections. Ernesto Zedillo, the PRI's nominee for president in the 1994 general elections was legitimately victorious because he received votes that the previous PRI presidents had not. However, there was a noticeable fragility to the beginning of his mandate as the nation was caught up in a sudden economic crisis (dubbed the "December mistake"), which occurred on 19 December 1994, as a result of an unexpected capital flight and a rise in financial speculation. This led to a near-70% devaluation of the national currency. Due to the seriousness of the problems, the prospect of a president resigning was openly discussed for the first time in a nation with a long-standing presidential tradition.[3] A number of erratic decisions in the first year of Zedillo's administration heightened the sense of vulnerability, including the police-military operation against the Zapatistas on 9 February 1995, the backing of the contested governors of Chiapas and Tabasco and the resignation of three secretaries of state in less than six months.

However, the Zedillo also reinforced the transition to full democracy:

Results

Chamber of Deputies

Notes and References

  1. http://edition.cnn.com/WORLD/9707/06/mexico.cierre/index.eng.html Mexico awaits verdict in historic election
  2. [Dieter Nohlen]
  3. Book: Levitsky . Steven . Revolution and Dictatorship: The Violent Origins of Durable Authoritarianism . Way . Lucan . 2022-09-13 . Princeton University Press . 978-0-691-22357-5 . en.