"Voto por voto, casilla por casilla?"

Titel: "Voto por voto, casilla por casilla?" : Democratic consolidation, political intermediation, and the Mexican election of 2006 / Ulrike Klinger
Beteiligt:
Veröffentlicht: Frankfurt/Main : Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Univ., Zentrum für Nordamerika-Forschung, 2007
Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource
Format: E-Book
Sprache: Englisch
Schriftenreihe/
mehrbändiges Werk:
ZENAF Arbeits- und Forschungsberichte ; 2007,1
Schlagworte:
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Zusammenfassung: After he had only tightly lost the election in July 2006, Andrés Manuel López Obrador and his Coalición claimed fraud and asserted that unfair conditions during the campaign had diminished his chances to win the presidency. The paper investigates this latter allegation centering on a perceived campaign of hate, unequal access to campaign resources and malicious treatment by the mass media. It further analyzes the mass media's performance during the conflictual post electoral period until the final decision of the Federal Electoral Tribunal on September 5th, 2006. While the media's performance during the campaign tells us about their compliance with fair media coverage mechanisms that have been implemented by electoral reforms in the 1990s, the mass media is uncontained by such measures after the election. Thus, their mode of coverage of the postelectoral conflicts allows us to "test" the mass media's transformation to a more unbiased, social responsible "fourth estate". Finally the paper scrutinizes whether the claims of fraud and the protests by the leftist movement resulted in lower levels of institutional trust and democratic support. The analysis of the media performance is based on data provided by the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE). Its Media Monitor encompassed more than 150 TV stations, 240 radio stations and 200 press publications. However, there is no comparable data available for the postelectoral period. Interviews with Mexican media experts, which the author has conducted during the postelectoral period, serve as empirical basis for the second part. Data on the public opinions and attitudes of Mexican citizens are taken from the 2007 Latinobarometro, the 2006 Encuesta Nacional and several polls conducted by Grupo Reforma. ...