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1952 Mexican general election

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FieldValue
flag_year1934
countryMexico
election_date7 July 1952
module{{Infobox election
embedyes
election_namePresidential election
typepresidential
previous_election1946 Mexican general election
previous_year1946
next_election1958 Mexican general election
next_year1958
image_size130x130px
image1Adolfo Ruiz Cortines (cropped).jpg
nominee1Adolfo Ruiz Cortines
party1Institutional Revolutionary Party
home_state1Veracruz
popular_vote12,713,419
percentage174.31%
image2Mhg foto11.jpg
nominee2Miguel Henríquez Guzmán
party2FPPM
color2B70707
home_state2Coahuila
popular_vote2579,745
percentage215.88%
image3Efraín González Luna.jpg
nominee3Efraín González Luna
party3National Action Party (Mexico)
home_state3Jalisco
popular_vote3285,555
percentage37.82%
titlePresident
before_electionMiguel Alemán Valdés
before_partyInstitutional Revolutionary Party
after_electionAdolfo Ruiz Cortines
after_partyInstitutional Revolutionary Party

General elections were held in Mexico on 7 July 1952. The presidential elections were won by Adolfo Ruiz Cortines of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), who received 74.3% of the vote. In the Chamber of Deputies election, the PRI won 151 of the 161 seats. These were the last presidential elections in Mexico in which women were not allowed to vote.

Campaign

President Miguel Alemán Valdés appointed his Secretary of the Interior, Adolfo Ruiz Cortines, as the PRI's presidential candidate. The coordinator of Ruiz Cortines's campaign was Adolfo López Mateos, who later succeeded him as president.

Miguel Henríquez Guzmán, a former priísta who left the party in 1951, was nominated as the candidate of the Federation of the Mexican People's Parties (FPPM). The National Action Party (PAN) nominated Efraín González Luna as their first-ever presidential candidate. Finally, the well-known union leader Vicente Lombardo Toledano ran as the candidate of the Popular Party (PP).

The 1952 campaign season saw the model of political advertising aimed at praising the virtues of a party's candidate adopted. It was also the first time in Mexican history that market research was used in a political campaign.

Among the opposition candidates, Henríquez Guzmán became particularly popular. His campaign used a mariachi tune composed for him by Manuel Ramos Trujillo to promote his candidacy. Though this use of campaign jingles was condemned by critics who saw it as taking away the seriousness of politics, the success of the song throughout many regions of the country led to widespread adoption of this and other marketing techniques in future campaigns.

The alleged role of the family of Lázaro Cárdenas (president in 1934–1940) in this election has been widely commented: Amalia Solórzano and Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas — respectively the wife and son of the former president — reportedly supported Henríquez Guzmán's candidacy, while Dámaso Cárdenas (brother of Lázaro and governor of Michoacán at the time) emphatically campaigned in favour of Ruiz Cortines; Lázaro himself was rumoured to be a sympathizer of Henríquez Guzmán, although officially he supported Ruiz Cortines, albeit in a rather discreet manner.

Former Governor of Baja California Sur Francisco José Múgica (by then estranged from the PRI) made some statements during the campaign accusing Ruiz Cortines of having collaborated with the invaders during the 1914 US occupation of Veracruz. Ruiz Cortines denied the accusations and claimed that at the time he was in Mexico City in service of the Revolution under the command of Alfredo Robles Domínguez and Heriberto Jara Corona. Later in the campaign, during a visit to Veracruz on 7 June, the Municipality of Xalapa honoured him with a parchment denying the accusations and naming him a "Patriot and Illustrious Son of Veracruz".

RuizCortinescampaign.JPG|An item from the Ruiz Cortines campaign.

Results

President

Senate

Chamber of Deputies

Opposition deputies were sworn in to represent the following districts during the :

Aftermath

In the official election count, Ruiz Cortines won with more than 74 percent of the popular vote, followed by Henríquez Guzmán with 16 percent. These results set off a wave of protests in several states by Henríquez supporters, which were violently suppressed by the administration of Miguel Alemán Valdés. Among those calling for justice were the former Mexican ambassador to Honduras, José Muñoz Cota Ibáñez, and Alicia Pérez Salazar.

Some military chiefs, sympathizers of Henríquez Guzmán and aligned with former president Lázaro Cárdenas, seized the opportunity and proposed to carry out a coup d'état so that Henríquez would become president. However, it was Henríquez himself who rejected the plan, and instead he asked his supporters to stop the violent protests. Despite the intensity of the protests, the results stood, and as a result Henríquez Guzmán then retired from public life.

Many years after the election, Ruiz Cortines revealed that only five weeks before he was scheduled to take office, he underwent a surgery to get rid of a hernia; to keep the surgery as a secret from the media, an operating room was temporally installed in Ruiz Cortines's Mexico City residence. After the successful surgery, Ruiz Cortines took office as scheduled on 1 December.

References

References

  1. [[Dieter Nohlen]] (2005) ''Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I'', p453 {{ISBN. 978-0-19-928357-6
  2. Nohlen, p468
  3. (1987). "Los hombres del presidente de la Madrid". Foro Internacional.
  4. (2012). "Adolfo Ruiz Cortines: El poder con honradez". Editores e Impresores Profesionales EDIMPRO.
  5. (2012). "Adolfo Ruiz Cortines: El poder con honradez". Editores e Impresores Profesionales EDIMPRO.
  6. "Legislatura 42". [[Chamber of Deputies (Mexico).
  7. "Henríquez Guzmán, el general que evitó un baño de sangre en 1952".
  8. (2012). "Adolfo Ruiz Cortines: El poder con honradez". Editores e Impresores Profesionales EDIMPRO.
  9. (26 June 2015). "Nunca estuvo en peligro la vida del presidente: médicos". El Financiero.
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