Candidates exchange barbs in Mexico debate
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this photo released by Mexico's Federal Electoral Institute (IFE), presidential candidates Enrique Pena Nieto (Revolutionary Institutional Party, PRI), left, Josefina Vazquez Mota (National Action Party, PAN), second from left, Gabriel Quadri (New Alliance Party, PANAL), third from left, and Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (Democratic Revolution Party and Workers Party, PRD,PT), pose for a group photo prior to the start of the first presidential debate in Mexico City, Sunday May 6, 2012. Next July 1, Mexico will hold presidential election. (AP Photo/IFE)(Credit: AP)MEXICO CITY (AP) — Rivals of the front-runner in Mexico’s presidential race attacked him Sunday night as a liar with ties to corrupt figures in the country’s former ruling party, filling the first candidates’ debate with acrimonious exchanges of accusations and counter-accusations.
The tone heated up nearly halfway through the two-hour debate as Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the third-place candidate of the leftist Democratic Revolution Party, reached behind his lectern and pulled out a photo of Enrique Pena Nieto, the candidate of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, smiling alongside a political ally whose career ended in accusations of corruption.
“Who is Enrique Pena Nieto, really?” Lopez Obrador asked.
Pena Nieto pulled out his own photo of a former Lopez Obrador aide jailed on a corruption charge.
Minutes later, Lopez Obrador showed the camera another photo, of Pena Nieto with former President Carlos Salinas, whom Lopez Obrador painted as evidence of a clique of power-brokers trying to retake power for the party that ruled for 71 years before it lost the presidency in 2000.
Josefina Vazquez Mota of the ruling National Action Party, running nearly 20 points behind Pena Nieto in most polls ahead of the July 1 vote, leaped in with her own prop, a blown-up cover of an Economist magazine profile of Pena Nieto that she said showed that he had lied about reducing homicide figures during his term as governor of the state of Mexico.
“There are two ways of lying,” she said. “One, not telling the truth and the other, making up statistics.”
The first televised debate among the four presidential candidates was seen as a key opportunity for Pena Nieto’s rivals to cut into his double-digit lead as he seeks to return the country’s former ruling party to power. Observers said the debate would be a test of whether Pena Nieto, a telegenic former governor of Mexico state who is married to a Mexican soap opera star, could stray from his carefully choreographed campaign and think on his feet.
With questions agreed-upon beforehand, he stuck to his themes of change and competence, and parried Vazquez Mota’s critiques as based upon incorrect information, a frequent refrain from his team in the first month of the campaign. Under more pointed attack from Lopez Obrador and Vazquez Mota, his responses grew more aggressive and heated, but he avoided any major errors in the first two-thirds of debate.




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