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Mexico
WorldAmericas

Tens of thousands protest against Mexico’s president in capital city’s main square

  • Ahead of presidential election, protesters rallied against what they claim are attempts by President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador to divide country
  • Lopez Obrador often attacks those who disagree with him as ‘racist, classist, conservative’; Mexico extremely polarised ahead of the June 2 election

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A balloon depicting Mexico’s President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador at a protest in Mexico City’s Zocalo Square on Sunday. Photo: Reuters
Associated Press

Tens of thousands of mostly opposition supporters protested on Sunday against Mexico’s president in the capital’s vast colonial-era main plaza ahead of the June presidential election.

The protesters in Mexico City carried signs reading “We are Mexicans”, referring to what they claim are attempts by President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador to divide the country.

Mexico is extremely polarised ahead of the June 2 presidential election. Lopez Obrador regularly rails against reporters, the middle class, businessmen and people he calls “individualists” and social climbers.
Opposition presidential candidate Xochitl Galvez attends a rally at Zocalo Square in Mexico City on Sunday. Photo: Reuters
Opposition presidential candidate Xochitl Galvez attends a rally at Zocalo Square in Mexico City on Sunday. Photo: Reuters

The protest was originally called to defend independent electoral agencies the president wants to reduce or de-fund. But many protesters carried banners supporting opposition candidate Xochitl Galvez. Former Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum of the president’s Morena party appears to be leading the race going into the June 2 vote.

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Mexican presidents are limited to a single six-year term.

Mexico City resident Joel Guerra, 59, carried a sign that read “Reclaim Mexico”.

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“The president says that only his supporters are ‘the good people’ of Mexico, and the rest of us don’t have rights,” Guerra said. “We are people, too.”

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