Trending

As In US, Drug Trafficking, Migrant Smuggling Are Key Voter Issues In Mexico Elections Sunday

Drug Trafficking, Migrant Smuggling Key Voter Issues In Mexico Elections On Sunday

A devotee carries a Santa Muerte statue before a prayer in the Tepito neighborhood of Mexico City, Saturday, June 1, 2024. Nearly 100 million people are registered to vote in the country's June 2 general elections. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

Voters in Mexico are participating in the country’s largest election in history – casting votes Sunday to fill more than 20,000 local, state and federal positions and almost certainly elect their first female president.

But rampant violence has marred the road toward one of the most consequential elections in Mexico’s history.

Criminal groups have taken over large parts of Mexico as they fight for territory to traffic drugs into the U.S., make money from migrant smuggling, and extort residents to fuel their illicit enterprise.

Violence against political figures has also persisted throughout this election cycle, resulting in a 150% increase in the number of victims of political violence since 2021, according to an analysis from Integralia, a public affairs consulting firm that researches political risk and other issues in Mexico.

These have greatly dismayed Mexican voters, leading most of them to cite security as a top issue of concern. About 6 in 10 Mexican adults consider the city where they live to be unsafe due to robberies or armed violence, according to a survey by Mexico’s National Institute of Statistics and Geography published in April.

Both front-running presidential candidates – Claudia Sheinbaum of Mexico’s governing political party, Morena, and Xóchitl Gálvez, of the opposition coalition Broad Front for Mexico – have drastically different ideas on the best way to reduce crime.

Read the full story from NBC News

BACK TO HOMEPAGE