Current:Home > MarketsMexico’s drug cartels and gangs appear to be playing a wider role in Sunday’s elections than before -TradeWisdom
Mexico’s drug cartels and gangs appear to be playing a wider role in Sunday’s elections than before
View
Date:2025-04-18 05:34:56
COTIJA, Mexico (AP) — Mexico’s drug cartels and gangs appear to be playing a wider role than before in Sunday’s elections that will determine the presidency, nine governorships and about 19,000 mayorships and other local posts.
The country’s powerful drug cartels have long staged targeted assassinations of mayoral and other local candidates who threaten their control. Gangs in Mexico depend on controlling local police chiefs, and taking a share of municipal budgets; national politics appear to interest them less.
But in the runup to Sunday’s vote, gangs have increasingly taken to spraying whole campaign rallies with gunfire, burning ballots or preventing the setting up of polling stations, and even putting up banners seeking to influence voters.
Security analyst David Saucedo says it’s likely some drug gangs will try to force voters to cast ballots for their favored candidates.
“It it is reasonable to assume that the cartels will mobilize their support bases during Sunday’s elections,” Saucedo said. “They have loyal voters who they have won over through the distribution of food packages, cash, medicine and infrastructure projects. They will use them to support narco-candidates.”
In some places, it appears the gangs are encouraging people to vote while discouraging voting in areas controlled by their rivals.
On Friday, electoral authorities reported that assailants burned a house where ballots were being stored ahead of Sunday in the violence-wracked town of Chicomuselo, in the southern state of Chiapas. While they did not say who was behind the attack, the town is completely dominated by two warring drug cartels, Jalisco and Sinaloa.
On May 14, gunmen apparently linked to a cartel shot and killed 11 people in a single day in Chicomuselo. On May 17, five people were killed along with a mayoral candidate when gunmen opened fire on a crowd in the town of La Concordia, Chiapas, about 45 miles (75 kilometers) east of Chicomuselo.
Targeted assassinations of local candidates continued. On Wednesday, dramatic video images showed a mayoral candidate in the southern state of Guerrero being shot in the head at point-blank rage with a pistol. A total of 31 candidates, almost all running for mayorships, have been killed this year.
But mass attacks on campaign rallies, once exceedingly rare in Mexico, are becoming common, and have killed many more supporters than candidates this year. The effect is intimidating.
On Wednesday, the last official day of campaigning, unidentified gunmen opened fire a couple of blocks away from a mayoral candidate’s final campaign rally in the western state of Michoacan, sending hundreds of people scrambling for safety.
“It seemed like a normal evening, like the campaign closers of other candidates,” said Angélica Chávez, a homemaker who was at the rally in Cotija. “Then there were gunshots, several rounds of gunfire very close. And then people started running and diving to the ground, crouching.”
Chávez was hurt in the stampede and had to take refuge in a local church.
In Celaya, a city in Guanajuato, gunmen opened fire on a campaign event in April, killing a mayoral candidate and wounding three of her supporters.
Saucedo, the analyst, sees the shootings as a sign that narco gangs are no longer willing to see their handpicked candidates lose.
“Rather than allow the victory of a candidate who is not in line with their criminal interests, or allow a candidate linked to a rival drug gang to win, they use this tactic,” Saucedo said. “What we’re seeing in the final stretch is pretty desperate strategy on the part of some groups of drug traffickers.”
Saucedo said that such attempts at narco-control of local politics had been seen previously in some particularly violent states, like Tamaulipas. “What was once limited ... is now spreading to include the whole country,” he said.
The National Electoral Institute says it has had to cancel plans for 170 polling places, mostly in Chiapas and Michoacan and mostly because of security problems. In Chiapas, electoral authorities say there are places they can’t even go to. While that’s a tiny fraction of the country’s 170,858 polling places, it’s disturbing.
And in the northern border city of Nuevo Laredo, a shadowy group that local media reports link to the dominant Northeast drug cartel has put up posters claiming one mayoral candidate is linked to the rival Gulf drug cartel.
Authorities have not confirmed the origin of the crude poster, which includes a photoshopped image of the candidate waving an assault rifle and wearing a bulletproof vest with the Gulf cartel’s insignia.
In the state of Morelos, just south of Mexico City, residents awoke this week to find a banner strung over a road claiming a gubernatorial candidate was tied to rival drug gangs. The banner was signed by a local drug boss whose name is unknown, “the Commander of the Three Letters.”
Another apparently gang-related banner threatened that anyone trying to buy votes would be “punished severely.” That banner was signed by “Those who have always called the shots here.”
Such events appear to indicate that past calculations by the cartels — take out the strongest candidate you don’t like, and the remaining major-party candidate will win by default — have become more complicated.
In one town in Michoacan, Maravatio, the gangs apparently tried to eliminate any doubts as to who will win this year; they killed off three candidates for town mayor who were apparently not to their liking.
___
Sánchez reported from Mexico City. Associated Press writers Mark Stevenson in Mexico City and Edgar H. Clemente in Tapachula, Mexico, contributed to this report.
veryGood! (81)
Related
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- New Research Shows Aerosol Emissions May Have Masked Global Warming’s Supercharging of Tropical Storms
- New Mexico Wants it ‘Both Ways,’ Insisting on Environmental Regulations While Benefiting from Oil and Gas
- How Tucker Carlson took fringe conspiracy theories to a mass audience
- Sam Taylor
- Anwar Hadid Sparks Romance Rumors With Model Sophia Piccirilli
- A South Florida man shot at 2 Instacart delivery workers who went to the wrong house
- A Legal Pot Problem That’s Now Plaguing the Streets of America: Plastic Litter
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- When you realize your favorite new song was written and performed by ... AI
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Why Chris Evans Deactivated His Social Media Accounts
- BuzzFeed shutters its newsroom as the company undergoes layoffs
- Meet the 'financial hype woman' who wants you to talk about money
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Rural grocery stores are dying. Here's how some small towns are trying to save them
- Facebook users can apply for their portion of a $725 million lawsuit settlement
- A Legal Pot Problem That’s Now Plaguing the Streets of America: Plastic Litter
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Boy Meets World's Original Topanga Actress Alleges She Was Fired for Not Being Pretty Enough
The economics of the influencer industry
10 Trendy Amazon Jewelry Finds You'll Want to Wear All the Time
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Ezra Miller Breaks Silence After Egregious Protective Order Is Lifted
This Next-Generation Nuclear Power Plant Is Pitched for Washington State. Can it ‘Change the World’?
Bud Light sales dip after trans promotion, but such boycotts are often short-lived