Margarita Zavala
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The wife of former Mexican President Felipe Calderon, Margarita Zavala,
said on Sunday she would seek to emulate her husband by running for the
presidency in 2018, and left open the prospect of staging an independent bid.
A former congresswoman for the
center-right National Action Party (PAN), Zavala made a broad appeal across the
political spectrum in a spartan two-minute video, saying she would work to
improve the economy and the rule of law in Mexico.
Reuters report continues:
Public anger over impunity,
political corruption and sluggish economic growth have created widespread
discontent with the government of Calderon's successor, President Enrique Pena
Nieto of the centrist Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).
The 47-year-old Zavala was a popular
first lady during her husband's 2006-2012 PAN administration, which became
increasingly bogged down in a bloody struggle against violent drug gangs,
culminating in the party's fall from power.
Zavala's bid also appeared to be a
challenge to the PAN, whose leadership was criticized by her supporters when
she sought and was denied a spot on the list of safe seats on offer in lower
house legislative elections held last weekend.
Though Pena Nieto's approval ratings
have hit multi-year lows, the PAN has been riven by infighting and finished a
distant second in the vote to the PRI.
Formal campaigning will only begin a
few months before the presidential elections scheduled for mid-2018 and no
clear PAN front-runner has yet emerged.
Zavala, wearing black and standing
against a white screen, did not say whether she would be seeking the PAN
nomination, instead hinting at the option of an independent candidacy.
"I will put together, hand in
hand with the people, a national campaign that of course includes PAN
supporters, but also those who have voted for other political alternatives and
those who have stopped believing in parties," she said.
A recent change in Mexico's
electoral law now allows independent candidates to run for high office.
The PRI was hammered by the new
rules during last Sunday's elections when a party renegade easily claimed the
governorship of Nuevo Leon, a northern state and a principal engine of the
Mexican economy.
Federico Berrueto, director general
of polling firm GCE, said Zavala's best hope of winning was with the PAN
because she seemed too closely associated with Calderon to be truly
independent.
"The mood in Mexico at the moment favours
candidates or parties who are basically against everything," he said.
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