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			<title>Okane Capital - Ahorro - Union - Fuerza - Inversion</title>
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			<lastBuildDate>Wed, 16 Aug 2006 10:13:00 -0500</lastBuildDate>
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				<title>Editorial del WASHINGTON POST &gt; de HOY Agosto 16 -  sobre AMLO</title>
				<link>http://www.okanecapital.com/index.cfm/2006/8/16/Editorial-del-WASHINGTON-POST--de-HOY-Agosto-16---sobre-AMLO</link>
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				Mexico&apos;s Moment of TruthWill a fair vote stand?IN THE 6 1/2 weeks since he narrowly lost Mexico&apos;s presidential election, Andr&#xe9;s Manuel L&#xf3;pez Obrador has turned the nation&apos;s politics into a public spectacle. A fiery populist with a messianic streak, Mr. L&#xf3;pez Obrador has led thousands of his supporters to pitch tent cities in downtown Mexico City, occupying the Zocalo, its main square, and a two-mile stretch of the Paseo De La Reforma, one of its major boulevards. He has denounced the election as a fraud and the product of a vast conspiracy, without furnishing even remotely convincing proof. Now, after a partial recount has apparently failed to yield any significant shift in his favor, he threatens to paralyze Mexico with a campaign of civil disobedience &quot;for years, if that is what circumstances warrant.&quot;His goal, Mr. L&#xf3;pez Obrador nobly insists, is to &quot;save&quot; Mexico&apos;s fragile democracy. In fact, by daily demonstrating his disdain for the country&apos;s electoral institutions while showing no actual failure on their part, Mr. L&#xf3;pez Obrador threatens to subvert the democracy he claims to champion.As Mr. L&#xf3;pez Obrador recklessly toys with the stability of a nation that emerged from one-party rule just this decade, it is worth examining the election he has been so busy maligning. Although he trailed Felipe Calder&#xf3;n, a center-right candidate, by 244,000 votes in the presidential tally -- barely 0.59 percent of the 41 million votes cast -- the vote yielded big gains for Mr. L&#xf3;pez Obrador&apos;s left-leaning Party of the Democratic Revolution; it picked up seats in the nation&apos;s Congress. When some members of Mr. L&#xf3;pez Obrador&apos;s own party disputed his allegations of fraud, he publicly accused them of having been bought. Although there was no evidence of widespread irregularities, let alone fraud, on Aug. 5, Mexico&apos;s independent Federal Electoral Tribunal, a seven-judge panel, ordered a recount at 11,839 polling stations, about 9 percent of the total.That recount is complete. According to Mexican press reports, it has yielded no major change in the presidential results -- certainly nothing sufficient to justify Mr. L&#xf3;pez Obrador&apos;s wild allegations. The Federal Electoral Tribunal now has until Sept. 6 to either annul the election or certify the results and declare a winner.Mexico, for years a party-led dictatorship, is at a turning point. Will its relatively new and untested democratic institutions be able to resolve a contested election, or will it descend into chaos and weak central authority as a result of a failed candidate&apos;s cult of personality? One hopeful sign is that lately Mr. L&#xf3;pez Obrador&apos;s crowds have dwindled in the streets of Mexico City. That may mean that even his partisans have begun to recognize that Mexico&apos;s continuing progress toward democracy is more important than one man&apos;s unbridled ambition.&#xa9;2006 The Washington Post Company 
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				<category>Noticias Importantes</category>
				
				<pubDate>Wed, 16 Aug 2006 10:13:00 -0500</pubDate>
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