Candidates covet crucial female vote

As Mexico’s presidential election on July 1 pits a ladies’ man against a woman, the female vote could play a more decisive role than usual.

With Josefina Vazquez Mota of the National Action Party (PAN) gradually gaining ground on him in the polls, Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) candidate Enrique Peña Nieto is looking to win over the female electorate in order to retain his lead.

This may take more than a flash of those perfect teeth. According to a report published by a major Mexican newspaper, Peña Nieto hopes to do so by focusing on gender equality and even promising better soap operas.

Last week Mural published a draft strategy by the frontrunner’s campaign team entitled “The Women’s Candidate.” Allegedly prepared by campaign coordinator Gerardo Ruiz Esparza and technical secretary Roberto Padilla, the memo calls for the PRI to take the lead in women’s rights and “promote the development of a new, more equal model of social and family life.”

It says Peña Nieto should promise to staff his campaign and government teams with equal numbers of men and women, raise budgets to combat domestic violence and increase female participation in public-sector management roles.

Proposed actions include staging a rally before five to ten thousand people on the first day of the official campaign season (March 30), where Peña Nieto is declared “the women’s candidate.” Another suggested policy is to replace the National Institute for Women (Inmujeres) created by former President Vicente Fox with a new government body for gender equality.

Bizarrely, the memo also suggests that Peña Nieto “promote new models of coexistence” through prime-time soap operas. Telenovelas are hugely popular among housewives in Mexico, but the proposed campaign promise of better soap operas has drawn derision from the national press.

Peña Nieto’s campaign team quickly denied the existence of any such draft outlining the candidate’s plans to target female voters. They slammed Mural for running a “systematic strategy to discredit Peña Nieto” by publishing “unverified information on its front page as if it were valid.”

Whether or not the document is legitimate, there is no doubt that both leading candidates are striving to win over female voters. While by no means a homogeneous demographic, women account for half of the electorate in Mexico. Should either candidate manage to attract a majority of female voters, this could be enough to swing the election their way.

Peña Nieto, 45, is young, handsome and has a glamorous wife in telenovela star Angelica Rivera. He was once considered the obvious choice of Mexican housewives, but since winning the nomination of the incumbent PAN last month, Vazquez Mota has been steadily eating into his support base.

Six years his senior, Vazquez Mota, is the first woman  to represent one of Mexico’s three major parties in a presidential election. Although the PAN has lost support over President Felipe Calderon’s war on organized crime, her candidacy offers the party a unique selling point as campaign season approaches.

In a country notorious for machismo, Vazquez Mota has not hidden her femininity but flaunted it. She also demonstrated a predatory instinct after Peña Nieto floundered last December by making the seemingly sexist comment, “I’m not the woman of the house,” when pressed on the price of tortillas in an interview.

Vazquez Mota sought to capitalize on the gaffe by launching a page on her website titled, “I am the woman of the house.” Aiming to project the image of a regular mom, she posted photos of herself greeting members of the public during a carefully staged trip to the supermarket.

Despite both candidates’ posturing, there is one factor that limits the potential impact of any unified female vote: the patriarchal nature of Mexican society.

According to the National Council to Prevent Discrimination (CONAPRED), 3.4 million Mexican women will be told who to vote for by their partners. Disturbingly, 11 percent of Mexican males consider it justifiable to beat their wife if she disobeys.