Posted on 07/02/2006 6:24:13 PM PDT by lauriehelds
Kieran Murray and Alistair Bell
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexico's presidential election is too close to call between a leftist anti-poverty campaigner and the conservative ruling party candidate locked in a tie, a respected exit poll said on Sunday.
The extremely close vote raised fears of a political crisis if any of the main candidates challenge the results and call street protests.
Pre-election polls had showed Felipe Calderon of the ruling party and Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the left-wing former mayor of Mexico City, in a virtual tie. Exit polls from Mexico's two main television station and the El Universal newspaper said they could not declare a winner.
El Universal said the race was between Lopez Obrador and Calderon. Neither of the TV stations mentioned Roberto Madrazo of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which ruled Mexico for most of the 20th century.
The Federal Electoral Institute was expected to announce official results at around 11 p.m. If it is unable to call a winner, Mexico could face days or weeks of legal wrangling and protests similar to the fight that followed the U.S. presidential election in 2000.
(Excerpt) Read more at today.reuters.com ...
What they did was to take a representative sample of the whole vote, then use some math voodoo-fu and see if there's any combination where one side has something like 99.95% of certainty of having at least one vote more than the closer rival.
That was not the case, there's no high probability for none of the top runners, therefore the IFE says "We better take the whole sample".
What happens (at least up to what we know right now) is, any of those two could have won.
I think the lefty won it.....running out of the ballots is one sign....
I'd love to see what Mexico's "red states" and "blue states" are?
here's Calderon...
About 50%. Cheer up. Tijuana has not reported much, and that dump loves PAN apparently.
Thanks AdianR and Torie.
I am glued to my monitor and TV.
Waiting for the next projection. LOL.
The first column is the gap between the two. The second column is the number of votes for Calderon. I didn't keep the % reporting but it roughly corresponds to Calderon vote.
260K 2.779M
280K 3.184M
292K 3.599M
317K 4.041M
331K 4.482M
351K 4.937M
364K 5.163M
365K 5.377M
375K 5.601M (35.65% reporting)
375,000 Calderon lead with 37% in.
Thanks mucho.
I recall your projections from prior elections have been solid.
LOL
And the most recent update:
375K 5.817M
Thanks.
Calderon is pounding out all their victories...maybe he won?
This is oddly familiar...hehe.
BTW How retarded is it to be so anti-Mexican you hope for a result than hinders American interest?
The picture is not as bleak as the percentages look. It should level off as the votes come in. (Obviously the AMLO camp doesn't see it that way and has not done the math...)
"The picture is not as bleak as the percentages look. It should level off as the votes come in. (Obviously the AMLO camp doesn't see it that way and has not done the math...)"
If AMLO was confident of a legitimate victory, he would have no reason to get on television and declare victory early. He is setting himself up to contest the election.
AMLO would know the numbers based on the 98% count...not the numbers we have. I'm hoping this is similar to when I felt like throwing up around 2:00 PST when Kerry had won.
Calderón is talking about polls. IMHO he should've kept quiet until official results. Now he's saying he won too.
Calderon Dino Socialist Aguascalientes 76,564 35,273 31,769 Baja California 45,517 19,880 21,360 Baja Cali Sur 5,620 3,636 8,799 Campeche 20,361 14,045 20,679 Coahuila 203,625 111,316 107,096 Colima 14,032 8,532 7,609 Chiapas 67,472 76,872 132,410 Chihuahua 149,725 93,834 66,599 Distrito Fed 544,465 165,057 1,106,292 Durango 95,176 42,897 45,028 Guanajuato 418,715 115,658 105,111 Guerrero 54,675 63,503 149,426 Hidalgo 72,807 55,658 109,022 Jalisco 519,847 233,210 198,723 México 673,838 344,154 867,134 Michoacán 204,838 87,171 219,413 Morelos 83,627 38,573 113,184 Nayarit 9,712 17,440 25,428 Nuevo León 451,529 223,952 136,884 Oaxaca 55,883 61,709 132,041 Puebla 273,650 116,521 203,850 Querétaro 120,210 37,435 58,140 Quintana Roo 43,978 30,160 47,006 San Luis Potosí 136,589 40,216 56,175 Sinaloa 99,382 61,511 88,354 Sonora 25,387 7,367 12,482 Tabasco 8,537 84,551 131,556 Tamaulipas 194,596 108,067 128,962 Tlaxcala 34,040 15,166 45,411 Veracruz 292,884 169,379 322,623 Yucatán 109,977 63,991 41,531 Zacatecas 55,881 28,705 59,646
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