Mexico ruling party has preliminary lead in key state vote
MEXICO CITY — The ruling party’s candidate held a slight advantage on in preliminary vote counts on Monday in the race for governor of Mexico’s most populous state, an election seen as a key test ahead of next year’s presidential election.
With about 97 per cent of votes counted, Alfredo del Mazo of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, had won 33.7 per cent of the votes in Mexico State, compared with 30.8 per cent for his closest rival, Delfina Gomez of the leftist Morena party. Mexico State surrounds Mexico City, and includes many of its suburbs and outlying slums. Final ballot counts are expected by Wednesday.
A PRI victory would hand the party a lifeline, after President Enrique Pena Nieto’s approval ratings dipped to near single digits and a parade of former PRI governors were jailed for corruption. Many believed the party would have been essentially knocked out of the 2018 presidential race if it failed to hold on to its last big bastion, Pena Nieto’s home state and one it has governed without interruption for 88 years.
But if Del Mazo wins, he will face a state where two-thirds of voters opposed him.


