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...they were preordained, the product of 71 years of one-party rule that ended in 2000. But when Mexicans go to the polls on July 2, few will gripe that this campaign has been too quiet. The front runner, former Mexico City Mayor Andrés Manuel López Obrador, of the leftist Democratic Revolution Party, has turned his rallies into carnival-style events, with supporters tossing marigold garlands around his neck and hoisting cages with squawking chachalaca birds that wear his opponents' names. To a raucous throng last week in Puebla, south of Mexico City, López pledged...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Politics of Immigration ? in Mexico | 6/27/2006 | See Source »

...pace. Another, Ollanta Humala, may win Peru's presidential election this month, and he too has pledged to drastically renegotiate his nation's contracts with foreign energy and mining companies. Meanwhile, though the front-runner in this year's Mexican presidential race, former Mexico City mayor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, is more friendly to foreign investment than the likes of Chavez, he has also pledged to review certain aspects of the 12-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Bolivia's Move Make Chavez Leader of the Pack? | 5/5/2006 | See Source »

...hammering the town plaza of Teloloapan in Mexico's southern Guerrero state. But thousands of people - mostly poor farmers wearing straw cowboy hats and gaunt faces, their wives clutching cheap umbrellas to try to stay cool - are standing to hear Andr?s Manuel L?pez Obrador, the front-runner in Mexico's July 2 presidential race. L?pez, sporting thick garlands of orange and yellow marigolds that supporters toss around his neck at campaign stops, is the candidate of the leftist Democratic Revolution Party (PRD). Yet as much as the struggling campesinos enjoy hearing his lavish social welfare promises, they're more interested...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can Mexico's Presidential Hopeful Solve the Immigration Mess? | 4/10/2006 | See Source »

...wonder then that Andr?s Manuel L?pez Obrador, the leftist former mayor of Mexico City whose platform focuses on the poor, is the heavy favorite to win Mexico?s July 2 presidential election. L?pez has not been shy about suggesting that Mexico may need to renegotiate NAFTA, especially with regard to U.S. agriculture subsidies, a prospect that alarms the Bush Administration. In a recent stump speech, L?pez called unabated Mexican migration "proof of the Mexican economic failure" in the NAFTA era, and he called for a "new cooperation accord with the U.S." to address Mexico?s development...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bush in Mexico: Whatever Happened to NAFTA? | 3/30/2006 | See Source »

Calderón “is the perfect candidate,†said Jeffrey A. Frankel, Harper professor of capital formation and growth at the Kennedy School. “The candidate on the left is very popular,†Frankel said, referring to Lopez Obrador...

Author: By Claire M. Guehenno, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Grad Seeks Mexican Presidency | 2/24/2006 | See Source »

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