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5th federal electoral district of Yucatán

Federal electoral district of Mexico

5th federal electoral district of Yucatán

Summary

Federal electoral district of Mexico

FieldValue
nameYucatán's 5th
imageFederal Electoral Districts of Yucatán (since 2022).png
caption
memberJazmín Yaneli Villanueva Moo
partyMorena
congress66th (2024–2027)
stateYucatán
head-townUmán
coordinates
covers{{Collapsible list
title29 municipalities
frame_styleborder:none; padding: 0;
regionThird
precincts186
population415,271
population-year2020
indigenousYes (81%)

| head-town = Umán |Abalá, Akil, Celestún, Chapab, Chocholá, Chumayel, Dzan, Halachó, Hunucmá, Kinchil, Kopomá, Mama, Maní, Maxcanú, Mayapán, Muna, Opichén, Oxkutzcab, Sacalum, Samahil, Santa Elena, Teabo, Tekax, Tekit, Tetiz, Ticul, Tzucacab, Ucú, Umán}} | population-year = 2020

Yucatán under the 2017–2022 districting plan
5th district in 2005–2017

The 5th federal electoral district of Yucatán () is one of the 300 electoral districts into which Mexico is divided for elections to the federal Chamber of Deputies and one of six such districts in the state of Yucatán.

It elects one deputy to the lower house of Congress for each three-year legislative period by means of the first-past-the-post system. Votes cast in the district also count towards the calculation of proportional representation ("plurinominal") deputies elected from the third region.

Created as part of the 1996 redistricting process, it was first contested in the 1997 mid-term election.

The current member for the district, elected in the 2024 general election, is Jazmín Yaneli Villanueva Moo of the National Regeneration Movement (Morena).

District territory

Yucatán gained a congressional seat in the 2023 redistricting process carried out by the National Electoral Institute (INE). Under the new districting plan, which is to be used for the 2024, 2027 and 2030 federal elections, the reconfigured 5th district is located in the south and west of the state. It comprises 186 electoral precincts (secciones electorales) across 29 municipalities:

  • Abalá, Akil, Celestún, Chapab, Chocholá, Chumayel, Dzan, Halachó, Hunucmá, Kinchil, Kopomá, Mama, Maní, Maxcanú, Mayapán, Muna, Opichén, Oxkutzcab, Sacalum, Samahil, Santa Elena, Teabo, Tekax, Tekit, Tetiz, Ticul, Tzucacab, Ucú and Umán.

The head town (cabecera distrital), where results from individual polling stations are gathered together and tallied, is the city of Umán. The district had a population of 415,271 in the 2020 Census and, with Indigenous and Afrodescendent inhabitants accounting for over 81% of that number, Yucatán's 5th – like all the state's electoral districts, both local and federal – is classified by the INE as an indigenous district.

Previous districting schemes

197419781996200520172023
Yucatán34555
Chamber of Deputies196300
Sources:

2017–2022 :Between 1996 and 2022, Yucatán had five federal electoral districts. Under the 2017 scheme, the 5th district's head town was at Ticul and it covered 34 municipalities in the south and west of the state but, unlike the 2022 plan, excluding the coastal municipalities: :*Abalá, Akil, Cantamayec, Chacsinkín, Chapab, Chochola, Chumayel, Cuzamá, Dzán, Halachó, Homún, Huhí, Kopomá, Mama, Maní, Maxcanú, Mayapán, Muna, Opichén, Oxkutzcab, Peto, Sacalum, Sanahcat, Santa Elena, Sotuta, Tahdziú, Teabo, Tecoh, Tekax, Tekit, Ticul, Tixmehuac, Tzucacab and Umán.

2005–2017 :Under the 2005 districting scheme, the district covered 33 municipalities in the west and south of the state, including the coastal municipalities to the west of Progreso. The district's head town was the city of Ticul.

1996–2005 :Between 1996 and 2005, Yucatán's new 5th district covered a similar territory as under the 2017 scheme: without the coastal municipalities of the north-west and with a larger slice of the south of the state. The head town was Ticul and the district covered 37 municipalities.

Deputies returned to Congress

ElectionDeputyPartyTermLegislature
1997[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]1997–200057th Congress
2000Rosa Elena Baduy Isaac[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2000–200358th Congress
2003Ángel Canul Pacab[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]][[File:Gray flag waving.png22px]]2003–200659th Congress
2006Gerardo Escaroz Soler[[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=National Action Party (Mexico)]]2006–200960th Congress
2009Martín Enrique Castillo Ruz[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2009–201261st Congress
2012Marco Alonso Vela Reyes
Alberto Leónides Escamilla Cerón[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2012–2015
201562nd Congress
2015Felipe Cervera Hernández
Rafael Chan Magaña[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2015–2018
201863rd Congress
2018Juan José Canul Pérez[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2018–202164th Congress
2021[[File:PVE dark logo (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Ecologist Green Party of Mexico]]2021–202465th Congress
2024title=Perfil: Dip. Jazmín Yaneli Villanueva Moo, LXVI Legislaturaurl=http://sil.gobernacion.gob.mx/Librerias/pp_PerfilLegislador.php?Referencia=9228166accessdate=8 January 2025website=Sistema de Información Legislativa (SIL)language = espublisher=SEGOB}}[[File:Morena logo (alt).svg22pxlink=National Regeneration Movement]]2024–202766th Congress

Presidential elections

ElectionDistrict won byParty or coalition%
2018Andrés Manuel López Obrador[[File:Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Labour Party (Mexico)]] [[File:Morena logo (alt).svg22pxlink=National Regeneration Movement]] [[File:Partido Encuentro Social (México).svg22pxlink=Social Encounter Party]]
Juntos Haremos Historia35.7559
2024Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo[[File:PVE dark logo (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Ecologist Green Party of Mexico]] [[File:Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Labour Party (Mexico)]] [[File:Morena logo (alt).svg22pxlink=National Regeneration Movement]]
Sigamos Haciendo Historia70.0069

Notes

References

References

  1. "Memoria de la Distritación Nacional 2021–2023". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  2. (31 January 2024). "How Mexico Elects Its Leaders – The Rules".
  3. "Circunscripciones". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  4. (1997). "La redistritación electoral mexicana, 1996: Memoria". [[Instituto Federal Electoral.
  5. (20 February 2023). "Nueva distritación electoral le quita diputados a la CDMX y le agrega a Nuevo León". Forbes México.
  6. (20 February 2023). "Acuerdo del Consejo General del Instituto Nacional Electoral por el que se aprueba el proyecto de la demarcación territorial de los trescientos distritos electorales federales uninominales".
  7. (3 October 2023). "Redistritación en Mérida y Yucatán: ¿Cuándo serán aprobados los cambios?". Diario de Yucatán.
  8. (1993). "Las Elecciones en México: evolución y perspectivas". Siglo XXI.
  9. (2014). "Evolución territorial de los distritos electorales federales uninominales, 1977–2010". Instituto de Geografía, [[National Autonomous University of Mexico.
  10. (15 March 2017). "Acuerdo del Consejo General del Instituto Nacional Electoral por el que se aprueba la demarcación territorial de los 300 distritos electorales federales uninominales". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  11. "Descriptivo de la distritación federal: Yucatán, marzo 2017". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  12. (2 March 2005). "Acuerdo del Consejo General del Instituto Federal Electoral por el que se establece la demarcación territorial de los trescientos distritos electorales federales uninominales".
  13. "Condensado de Yucatán". [[Federal Electoral Institute]].
  14. (12 August 1996). "Acuerdo del Consejo General del Instituto Federal Electoral por el que se establece la demarcación territorial de los trescientos distritos electorales federales uninominales".
  15. "Perfil: Dip. Carlos Hernando Sobrino Sierra, LVII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  16. "Perfil: Dip. Rosa Elena Baduy Isaac, LVIII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  17. "Perfil: Dip. Ángel Paulino Canul Pacab, LIX Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  18. "Cambios en la integración del Congreso: LIX Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  19. "Perfil: Dip. Gerardo Antonio Escaroz Soler, LX Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  20. "Perfil: Dip. Martín Enrique Castillo Ruz, LXI Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  21. "Perfil: Dip. Marco Alonso Vela Reyes, LXII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  22. "Perfil: Dip. Alberto Leónides Escamilla Cerón, LXII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  23. "Perfil: Dip. Felipe Cervera Hernández, LXIII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  24. "Perfil: Dip. Rafael Chan Magaña, LXIII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  25. "Perfil: Dip. Juan José Canul Pérez, LXIV Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  26. "Perfil: Dip. Consuelo Del Carmen Navarrete Navarro, LVX Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  27. "Diputaciones: Yucatán. Distrito 5. Umán". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  28. "Perfil: Dip. Jazmín Yaneli Villanueva Moo, LXVI Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  29. "Presidencia: Yucatán. Distrito 5. Ticul". [[National Electoral Institute.
  30. "Presidencia: Yucatán. Distrito 5. Umán". [[National Electoral Institute.
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