Local elections were held in the Mexican state of Yucatán on May 20, 2007. Voters went to the polls to elect on the local level:
- a new Governor of Yucatán to serve for a five-year term;
- 106 municipal presidents (mayors) to serve for a three-year term; and
- 25 local deputies (15 by the first-past-the-post system and 10 by proportional representation) to serve for a three-year term in the Congress of Yucatán.
Gubernatorial election
editNine political parties participated in the 2007 Yucatán state election, originally three parties (PRD, C and PT) decided to run together as a coalition but on February 11, 2007, the PRD decided to withdraw their support to the Convergence-Labor Party candidate.
After losing the candidacy in the PAN primaries, Ana Rosa Payán accepted the candidacy for the Todos Somos Yucatán coalition. 15 members of the PAN were also incarcerated after removing advertising material supporting non-PAN candidates[1] and for exchanging cash for voting cards.[2]
Opposition parties had accused both the federal and state governments of using public funds and publicly funded programs to support the PAN candidate. In response to this issue, the federal government decided to freeze all social programs on May 14, 2007, until after the elections.[3]
Party/Alliance | Candidate | |
---|---|---|
Citizens Alliance (PRI–PVEM–PAY) |
Ivonne Ortega Pacheco | |
PAN–PANAL | Xavier Abreu Sierra | |
Party of the Democratic Revolution | Héctor Herrera Álvarez | |
Todos Somos Yucatán (CTSY) (C–PT) |
Ana Rosa Payán | |
Social Democratic Alternative Party | Jorge Lizcano Esperón |
Election results
editGubernatorial election
editCandidate | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
Ivonne Ortega Pacheco | 421,035 | 49.92 |
Xavier Abreu Sierra | 358,116 | 42.46 |
Héctor Herrera Álvarez | 22,496 | 2.66 |
Ana Rosa Payán | 27,126 | 3.21 |
Jorge Lizcano Esperón | 1,347 | 0.15 |
Congressional elections
editDistrict | PAN | Citizens Alliance (PRI/PVEM/PAY) |
PRD | CTSY (C/PT) |
%of votes counted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
I Mérida | 14,625 | 11,656 | 700 | 2,196 | 80.20% |
II Mérida | 13,151 | 11,868 | 1,022 | 2,418 | 83.00% |
III Mérida | 19,356 | 22,189 | 1,244 | 2,553 | 85.80% |
IV Mérida | 30,541 | 23,987 | 1,864 | 4,576 | 81.10% |
V Mérida | 15,852 | 16,907 | 1,166 | 2,110 | 81.40% |
VI Mérida | 14,567 | 16,468 | 679 | 1,492 | 71.10% |
VII Umán | 15,271 | 19,369 | 1,142 | 796 | 81.00% |
VIII Progreso | 17,427 | 21,361 | 1,838 | 1,242 | 91.40% |
IX Motul | 19,000 | 17,279 | 1,716 | 1,772 | 97.10% |
X Tizimín | 24,079 | 22,270 | 3,031 | 326 | 94.00% |
XI Valladolid | 19,464 | 22,616 | 873 | 418 | 68.10% |
XII Tekax | 14,455 | 17,931 | 2,505 | 1,003 | 71.30% |
XIII Ticul | 18,669 | 20,423 | 1,876 | 1,373 | 82.50% |
XIV Tecoh | 16,600 | 18,165 | 1,522 | 597 | 57.00% |
XV Izamal | 16,828 | 19,007 | 1,414 | 325 | 71.00% |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ El PRI no quiere ni permitirá una negociación en Yucatán: Paredes, La Jornada, May 14, 2007.
- ^ PRI y PAN concentran sus recursos y operadores en 10 alcaldías yucatecas, La Jornada, May 18, 2007.