2006年VOA标准英语-Mexico Remains Calm in Face of Election Impasse(在线收听) |
By Greg Flakus Mexico remained calm the day after a presidential election that ended in a tight race too close to call and two candidates both claiming victory. Most Mexicans appear ready to wait a few days for official results, even if the candidates are not. --------------- The anxious situation is the result of a close vote count in Sunday's election between presidential candidates Felipe Calderon Hinojosa of the ruling National Action Party and Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador of the leftist Party of the Democratic Revolution. Federal Electoral Institute experts said the vote count was so close that they could not determine a winner through a random sample quick count. They said the slight difference between the two candidates fell within the margin of error for the quick count and that a complete, official count would commence Wednesday.
That leaves politicians, journalists and commentators in a state of high anxiety, but there is little of it apparent in the rest of Mexican society. The Mexican stock market rallied at its opening Monday and many people on the streets of Mexico City said they were content to wait until Wednesday, or even longer if necessary, for a final, official election result.
But Jorge, who says he voted for Lopez Obrador, dismissed that notion. He said the country would remain calm and that losing candidates would accept the final result, whatever it may be. Whether that scenario plays out or not, there is no question that the election results reveal deep divisions in Mexican society. Whoever ends up being declared the winner in the presidential race will have won only slightly more than a third of the vote and, as Reforma columnist Sergio Sarmiento notes, the percentage of Mexicans who actually brought the new president to power will be even less - around 20 percent - when the abstention rate of 40 percent is taken into account. The national Congress, likewise, will remain divided between the three parties, so that no major reform can pass without the formation of coalitions, something that current President Vicente Fox was unable to achieve during his six-year term. Sarmiento and other political analysts fear another six years could pass in a political impasse while much-needed reforms are left on the sidelines. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/7/33181.html |