Mexican Candidate Vows to Push for Open Border
Politics:
Vicente Fox, the leading opposition contender in Mexico, makes a campaign
swing through
California
hoping expatriates will influence vote back home.
By MARY BETH SHERIDAN, Times Staff Writer
BAKERSFIELD--To the blare of mariachi music, Mexico's leading opposition
candidate brought
his presidential
campaign to California on Sunday, promising to press for unrestricted entry
of Mexican
workers
to the United States.
Vicente Fox, regarded as the first presidential candidate who could break
the 71-year lock on
power
of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, vowed a more aggressive
policy to assist
Mexicans
in the United States.
"I will be the president of all Mexicans--those in the country and those
Mexicans outside the
country,"
Fox told about 300 cheering supporters at Sam Lynn Ball Park in this major
agricultural hub.
Fox's stop in Bakersfield--along with a later appearance at a Cinco de
Mayo festival in
Fresno--was
part of the most extensive U.S. campaigns ever conducted by Mexican presidential
candidates.
Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, the aspirant of the center-left Democratic Revolution
Party, or PRD, is set
to begin
his two-day U.S. campaign in Los Angeles today.
The swings by Cardenas and Fox, of the center-right National Action Party,
or PAN, illustrate the
growing
role of U.S.-based Mexicans back home. While Mexico does not permit absentee
voting
from abroad,
candidates believe the Mexican immigrants in the United States have broad
influence
over their
hometowns, which receive $6 billion a year in remittances.
Fox, a charismatic former governor of central Guanajuato state, was greeted
in Bakersfield by a
mariachi
band, farm workers waving Fox flags and local officials who proclaimed
an official Vicente
Fox Day.
The crowd at the Fresno event was far larger, numbering several thousand.
The imposing, 6-foot-5 candidate, wearing his trademark cowboy boots and
a grapefruit-sized
Fox belt
buckle, emphasized his admiration for Mexican immigrants--who for decades
were often
dismissed
as traitors by officials back home.
Fox offered an array of promises: to give the vote to Mexicans abroad,
to make money transfers
cheaper,
to guarantee health care for U.S.-based Mexican immigrants. And he brought
up the ultimate
dream
of many Mexicans: free access to seek the relatively well-paying jobs across
the border. "We'll
use all
our persuasion and all our talent to bring together the U.S., Canadian
and Mexican
governments
so that in five to 10 years, the border is totally open to the free movement
of workers,"
said Fox,
speaking in Spanish from a platform flying U.S., Mexican and California
flags.
There has been no indication that the U.S. government would agree to such
a plan. Bilateral talks
on a far
less ambitious program, to provide more visas for Mexican workers, have
gone slowly.
Still, it was significant that Fox was including Mexican immigrants among
his constituents--whether
his promises
were realistic or not. He emphasized that his government would make them
a priority
more than
any has before.
Fox has recently pulled nearly even with the candidate of the ruling party,
Francisco Labastida, in
polls.
Cardenas trails a distant third. The July 2 election is regarded as the
most hotly contested in
recent
Mexican history, in part because of a more open system and a decline in
the fraud that was
common
in the past.
Many supporters watching Fox on Sunday said they intended to call relatives
and friends back
home and
urge them to cast ballots for the candidate.
"Of course I will. It's very important. We need change," said Joel Martinez,
a 32-year-old manager
at a grape
company, clutching a cellular phone in one hand and holding his small daughter
with the
other.
Martinez came to the United States 10 years ago from Guanajuato.
Mary Dominguez, 65, who was born in Bakersfield to Mexican parents, prefers
English to Spanish
and has
never talked politics with her relatives in Sonora state in northern Mexico.
Seeing Fox, however, sparked a new interest in Mexican politics.
"I'm going to be sure and call them and see how they vote," she said.