Vazquez Mota gains favor in poll

Josefina Vazquez Mota, presidential hopeful from Mexico's ruling conservative National Action Party shows her ink-stained finger during the primary election to choose the PAN presidential candidate in Mexico city.

Josefina Vazquez Mota, presidential hopeful from Mexico's ruling conservative National Action Party shows her ink-stained finger during the primary election to choose the PAN presidential candidate in Mexico city.

Published Feb 20, 2012

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Mexico City - Josefina Vazquez Mota, the first female presidential candidate from any of Mexico's three main political parties, is steadily rising in popularity

and catching up to frontrunner Enrique Pena Nieto, a poll showed on Monday. Vasquez Mota, from the ruling National Action Party (PAN), has 32 percent support ahead of the July 1 election, but is still trailing 16 points behind Pena Nieto from the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI.

The survey by El Universal daily and polling firm Buendia & Laredo, the first to compare the three leading candidates, showed leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador trailing with 20 percent. Lopez Obrador narrowly lost in 2006 to President Felipe Calderon and contested the election results with months of street protests.

Positive opinions of Vazquez Mota spiked to 35 percent in February from 23 percent in November, while the positive view of Pena Nieto plateaued at 47 percent, the poll showed.

The PAN chose Vazquez Mota as their candidate in an internal election earlier this month, hoping she can pull independent woman voters and young people away from the telegenic Pena Nieto who has maintained a steady lead since last year.

Support for Calderon's PAN party has slipped as the government struggles to control spiraling drug violence, bolster the economy and ease gridlock in the country's legislature.

The PRI is hoping Pena Nieto, 45, can bring a new face to the party, which ruled Mexico for seven decades before it was ousted by the PAN in 2000

The poll, conducted between February 8 and 13, surveyed 1,000 people and has a margin of error of 3.5 percentage points. - Reuters

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