In Mexico decide this Sunday April 10 if Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (AMLO) He leaves the presidency early or ends his term in 2024, in the first recall referendum in the country’s history, which anticipates a boost to the leftist president.
“Let no one forget that the people are the ones who rule, the people put and the people take away”, said Lopez Obrador before the press after leaving the polling station.
YOU CAN SEE: Revocation of Mandate: how many votes does AMLO need to win this Sunday?
Watch LIVE and ONLINE the closing of the electoral day for the revocation of AMLO’s mandate
Results Revocation of Mandate 2022, LIVE: how was today’s election day Sunday
Live: Results of the mandate revocation in Mexico
YOU CAN SEE: Revocation of mandate in Mexico: how to locate my box to be able to vote?
Where can I find the results of today’s mandate revocation?
On the site of National Electoral Institute (INE) The results will begin to be disclosed after the quick count of the query, scheduled for a time between 9:00 and 10:00 p.m.
Until what time can I go to vote for the Revocation of Mandate 2022?
The booths will be open until 6:00 pm in most of the country, with 126 million inhabitants and where there are three time zones.
YOU CAN SEE: Mexico: they confirm the death of María Fernanda Contreras, the young woman who has been missing for 6 days
At what time does the Dry Law for the Revocation of Mandate end?
Until 11:59 pm this Sunday, April 10, the Dry Law.
AMLO, as he is known by the initials of his name, annulled his vote by writing “Long live Zapata”! to show himself impartial in this consultation that he himself promoted after getting it to be included in the Constitution in 2019 as an antidote against “bad governments.”
YOU CAN SEE: They find 11 bodies with signs of torture in a clandestine grave in Mexico
“It is going to help us so that no one at any level on the scale feels absolute,” added the ruler, elected for six years.
The voters began to arrive before the opening of the voting booths in Mexico Cityalthough analysts see it as difficult for the referendum to reach the participation threshold to be binding: 37 million voters (40% of those eligible to vote).
YOU CAN SEE: Revocation of López Obrador’s mandate: what is Mexico playing this weekend?
That fact alone would ratify the country’s first leftist president, 68 years old and with 58% approval, in office, according to a consolidated survey by the Oraculus firm. In Mexico there is no compulsory vote.
With information from AFP