Elections to the CDMX: after the closure of the PREP, which won the 16 town halls



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(Jovani Silva / Infobae Mexico)
(Jovani Silva / Infobae Mexico)

At 8:00 p.m. on June 7, the Preliminary Election Results Program (PREP) ended the virtual counting of votes cast at each of Mexico City’s 13,175 polling stations. The program was fed throughout the day until it reached 99.55% of the recordings captured.

In 8 of the 16 town halls, the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition achieved virtual victory, while in 7 Morena-PT took the lead and in one the PAN.

In this sense, the candidates who obtained the virtual victory of the competition in each of the 16 municipalities of the CDMX are:

Lemon packet of the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition, with 55.6% (182,181 votes)

Marguerite Saldaña Hernandez of the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition, with 42.9% (85 834 voice)

Santiago taboada of the PAN, with 68.1% (157,178 votes)

Young Gutiérrez of the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition, with 53.3% (168,872 votes)

The applicants Lía Limón, Adrián Rubalcava and Clara Brugada (Photos: Twitter)
The applicants Lía Limón, Adrián Rubalcava and Clara Brugada (Photos: Twitter)

Adrien ruvalcaba of the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition, with 64.00% (72,304 votes)

Sandra Cuevas Nieves of the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition, with 48.07% (119,202 votes)

Francisco Chiguil Figueroa by Morena-PT, with 44.3% (232,667 votes)

Raul Armando Quintero by Morena-PT, with 36.94% (64,790 votes)

Clara Brugada Molina placeholder image by Morena-PT, with 57.7% (386,522 votes)

Mauricio Tabe and Luis Gerardo Quijano (Photos: Twitter)
Mauricio Tabe and Luis Gerardo Quijano (Photos: Twitter)

Luis Gerardo Quijano of the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition, with 49.8% (56,015 votes)

Mauricio Tabé of the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition, with 54.7% (103,837 votes)

Judith Vanegas by Morena-PT, with 40.8% (23,568 votes)

Alfa González Magallanes of the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition, with 41.3% (118,626 votes)

Morena candidates Evelyn Parra and Judith Vargas (Photos: Twitter)
Morena candidates Evelyn Parra and Judith Vargas (Photos: Twitter)

Berenice Hernández Calderón by Morena-PT, with 42.7% (58,130 votes)

Evelyn Parra Alvarez by Morena-PT, with 50.6% (110,427 votes)

José Carlos Acosta Ruiz of the Morena-PT coalition, with 40.5% (61,992 votes)

It should be mentioned that the 2021 interim elections in Mexico City will have a new component for the first time: mayors can be re-elected. Of the 16 in the capital, nine have taken this route and seek to remain in office again.

(Photo: gpmorenacdmx.org.mx)
(Photo: gpmorenacdmx.org.mx)

As for Mexico City Congress, made up of 66 deputies elected in 33 by relative majority and 33 by proportional vote, the coalition PAN-PRI-PRD and the coalition Morena-PT stood out by their votes during the first counts of Electoral Institute of Mexico (IECM) at the cut-off at 8:00 p.m. on June 7.

The Labor Party and the National Regeneration Movement triumphed in 18 neighborhoods, while the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition maintained the advantage in 7 of the 33 electoral constituencies that make up the Congress of the capital.

Thus, at 8:00 p.m., the Morena-PT coalition won victory as the first force of the 38.30% neighborhoods and the PRI-PAN-PRD coalition in the 20%, of the 33 districts of Mexico City.

Morena, which to this day is still the first political force in the capital and the first also in the local Congress, did not obtain an isolated district, but the STOVE, yes, with 5 quarters, the 13.7% the same.

The PRI-PRD coalition won in 2 districts. In the meantime, the alliance of the three parties that made up the Morena-PT-PVEM for this election took place only in one constituency.

According to IECM, the PAN would remain with electoral constituencies Nos. 13, 17, 23, 26 and 30, located in the mayors of Cuajimalpa, Benito Juárez, Miguel Hidalgo and Coyoacán.

Morena, in his alliance with the Labor Party, would win generously in Districts 1, 3, 4, 7, 8, 10, 11, 14, 15, 19, 21, 22, 25, 27, 28, 29, 31 and 32 distributed in the boundaries of Azcapotzalco, Gustavo A. Madero, Milpa Alta, Tlalpan and Tláhuac.

The PRI-PRD would win the districts 12 and 20 located in the town hall of Cuauhtémoc and Iztapalapa. And the PRI-PAN-PRD alliance would be concluded with Districts 2, 6, 9, 16, 18, 24 and 33 with locations in Gustavo A. Madero, Magdalena Contreras, Tláhuac, Álvaro Obregón and Iztapalapa.

KEEP READING:

In photos: the historic elections of June 6 at the CDMX
PREP: at what time will be known the results of the Elections
Grenades, human heads, ballot thefts and burning of ballot papers: election violence in Mexico



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