Second-Place Finisher Challenges Mexico Election Result
By: Julian Aguilar, The Texas Tribune
Updated: July 3, 2012
MEXICO CITY -- Mexican presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lpez Obrador, who came in second in Sunday's election to the presumptive president-elect, Enrique Pea Nieto, said Monday evening that he would challenge the results of the outcome and ask for a recount.
Lpez Obrador accused Pea Nieto and his Institutional Revolutionary Party, or the PRI, of buying votes to manipulate the outcome of Sunday's election. Initial exit polls showed Pea Nieto, 45, with about a 7 percent advantage over Lpez Obrador, of the leftist progressive alliance, made up of the Party of the Democratic Revolution and the Labor Party.
Results of the conteo rpido -- the country's first estimate of the election results -- showed that Pea Nieto had received roughly 38 percent of the ballots cast, compared with Lpez Obrador's estimated 31 percent.
"We can say they bought a million votes, at least," the challenger said during a press conference Monday, according to Mexican media outlets.
Lpez Obrador lost to current president Felipe Calderon by a razor thin margin in 2006, which resulted in a weeks-long protest by his supporters in Mexico City. After Sunday's initial results were announced, Lpez Obrador said he would wait until the final vote count on Wednesday to decide whether to concede the election to Pea Nieto, the former governor of the state of Mexico.
The announcement came after President Barack Obama called Pea Nieto to congratulate him on his victory and assure him the United States remained committed to a relationship that benefits both countries.
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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/texas-mexico-border-news/texas-mexico-border/mexicos-election-question/.

