Jump to content

National Action Party (Mexico): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
leaders change in infobox
 
(467 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{short description|Mexican political party}}
{{refimprove|date=September 2009}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2024}}
{{Infobox Political party
{{Infobox political party
|country = Mexico
|name_english = National Action Party
| name = National Action Party
|name_native = Partido Acción Nacional (PAN)
| native_name = Partido Acción Nacional
| logo = [[File:PAN logo (Mexico).svg|150px]]
|colorcode = {{National Action Party (Mexico)/meta/color}}
|logo = [[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg|200px]]
| colorcode = {{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}
| president = {{ill|Jorge Romero Herrera|es}}
|president = [[Gustavo Madero Muñoz]]<ref>[http://www.pan.org.mx/ Presidente del Partido Acción Nacional]</ref>
| secretary_general = {{ill|Michel González Márquez|es}}
|foundation = {{Start date|1939|09|16|df=y}}
| founder = [[Manuel Gómez Morín]]<br />{{nobold|...{{nbsp}}''and others''}}{{refn|group=n|Gómez Morín founded the National Action Party of Mexico along with Roberto Cossío y Cosío, Juan Landerreche Obregón, Daniel Kuri Breña, Juan José Páramo Castro, Bernardo Ponce, Francisco Fernández Cueto, Carlos Ramírez Zetina and Enrique Manuel Loaeza Garay.<ref>{{cite web|access-date=2023-11-02|language=es-MX|title=PAN – Partido Acción Nacional|url=https://www.nmas.com.mx/perfiles/pan/|website=N+}}<!-- auto-translated by Module:CS1 translator --></ref>}}
|headquarters = Av. Coyoacán, № 1546 <br />Colonia del Valle <br />
| leader2_title = Senate leader
Del. Benito Juárez <br />[[Mexico City|México DF]] <small>CP</small>03100
| leader2_name = [[Guadalupe Murguía Gutiérrez]]
|newspaper =
| leader3_title = Chamber leader
|youth_wing = ''Acción Juvenil'' (Youth Action)
| leader3_name = {{ill|Noemí Luna Ayala|es}}
|membership_year =
| founded = {{nowrap|{{Start date and age|1939|09|16|df=y}}}}
|membership =
| headquarters = Av. Coyoacán No. 1546 [[Colonia del Valle|Col. Del Valle]], [[Benito Juárez, D.F.|Benito Juárez]], Mexico City
|ideology = [[Conservatism]],<ref>{{Citation |first=David A. |last=Shirk |title=Mexico's New Politics: The PAN and Democratic Change |publisher=Lynne Rienner Publishers |year=2005 |page=57 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=WOBRb0wKpocC&pg=PA55&dq=national+action+party+mexico+conservative&hl=en&sa=X&ei=2JtTT8WHLsTF0QWRzOjhCw&ved=0CFQQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=pan%20conservative&f=false}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |first=Gavin |last=O'Toole |title=Politics Latin America |publisher=Pearson Education |year=2007 |page=383 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=0A91Xz9leFMC&pg=PA383&dq=partido+accion+nacional+mexico+conservative&hl=en&sa=X&ei=JZdTT8-JMOrb0QXd6OHVCw&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=partido%20accion%20nacional%20mexico%20conservative&f=false}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |first=Susan M. |last=Gauss |title=Made in Mexico |publisher=Penn State Press |year=2010 |page=70 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Y4NTnNbRjzoC&pg=PA70&dq=partido+accion+nacional+mexico+conservative&hl=en&sa=X&ei=JZdTT8-JMOrb0QXd6OHVCw&ved=0CDIQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=partido%20accion%20nacional%20mexico%20conservative&f=false}}</ref><ref name="Cook2004">{{cite book|author=Rhodes Cook|title=The Presidential Nominating Process: A Place for Us?|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=1Lld7J5tZuwC&pg=PA118|accessdate=19 August 2012|year=2004|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-7425-2594-8|pages=118–}}</ref><br>[[Liberal conservatism]],<ref>{{Citation |first=David A. |last=Shirk |title=Mexico's New Politics: The PAN and Democratic Change |publisher=Lynne Rienner Publishers |year=2005 |page=54 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=WOBRb0wKpocC&dq=national+action+party+mexico+conservative&q=liberal#v=snippet&q=liberal&f=false}}</ref><br>[[Christian democracy]]<ref>{{Citation |first=Soledad |last=Loaeza |title=The National Action Party (PAN): From the Fringes of Political System to the Heart of Change |work=Christian Democracy in Latin America: Electoral Competition and Regime Conflicts |publisher=Stanford University Press |year=2003 |page=196 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Ppe20kevrzgC&pg=PA196&dq=National+Action+Party+mexico+christian+democratic&hl=en&sa=X&ei=fpdTT5-UBemx0QWv7s3YCw&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=National%20Action%20Party%20mexico%20christian%20democratic&f=false}}</ref>
| youth_wing = ''Acción Juvenil''
|position = [[Centre-right]]<ref>{{Citation |first1=Graciela |last1=Bensusán |first2=Kevin J. |last2=Middlebrook |title=Organized Labor and Politics in Mexico |work=The Oxford Handbook of Mexican Politics |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2012 |page=347 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=pkdDOyx5PDEC&pg=PA347&dq=partido+accion+nacional+mexico+centre+right&hl=en&sa=X&ei=aI9TT6aRKsyb1AXvpYDsCw&ved=0CEwQ6AEwBA#v=snippet&q=%22partido%20accion%20nacional%22%20%2B%22center-right%22&f=false}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |first=Evren Çelik |last=Wiltse |title=Globalization and Mexico |work=Globalization: Universal trends, regional implications |publisher=University Press of New England |year=2007 |page=214 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=x-duhc2vyikC&pg=PA214&dq=partido+accion+nacional+mexico+centre+right&hl=en&sa=X&ei=spRTT9QxqczRBfqFyc8L&ved=0CGwQ6AEwCTgK#v=onepage&q=partido%20accion%20nacional%20mexico%20centre%20right&f=false}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |first=Wayne A. |last=Cornelius |title=Mexicans Would Not Be Bought, Coerced |work=The Mexico Reader: History, Culture, Politics |publisher=Duke University Press |year=2002 |page=684 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=zP07gHeWNA8C&pg=PA684&dq=partido+accion+nacional+mexico+centre+right&hl=en&sa=X&ei=aI9TT6aRKsyb1AXvpYDsCw&ved=0CEUQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=partido%20accion%20nacional%20mexico%20centre%20right&f=false}}</ref> to [[right-wing politics|right-wing]]<ref>{{Citation |first1=Larissa |last1=Adler-Lomnitz |first2=Rodrigo |last2=Salazar-Elena |first3=Ilya |last3=Adler |title=Symbolism and Ritual in a One-Party Regime: Unveiling Mexico's Political Culture |publisher=University of Arizona Press |year=2010 |page=293 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=QkjFGSZA0OQC&pg=PA293&dq=National+Action+Party+%2Bmexico+%2Bright-wing&hl=en&sa=X&ei=TotTT8WDMuHG0QWl1IziCw&ved=0CFMQ6AEwBg#v=onepage&q=National%20Action%20Party%20%2Bmexico%20%2Bright-wing&f=false}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |first=Jacqueline |last=Mazza |title=Don't Disturb the Neighbors: The United States and Democracy in Mexico, 1980-1995 |publisher=Routledge |year=2001 |page=9 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=SrlkmdKs7DoC&pg=PA9&dq=National+Action+Party+mexico+right+wing&hl=en&sa=X&ei=notTT7PjDerZ0QXjv4HlCw&ved=0CGQQ6AEwCDgK#v=onepage&q=National%20Action%20Party%20mexico%20right%20wing&f=false}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |first=Martin C. |last=Needler |title=Mexican Politics: The Containment of Conflict |edition=3rd |publisher=Praeger Publishers |year=1995 |page=61 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AOZdMLLx1t8C&pg=PA61&dq=National+Action+Party+%2Bmexico+%2Bright-wing&hl=en&sa=X&ei=TotTT8WDMuHG0QWl1IziCw&ved=0CD4Q6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=National%20Action%20Party%20%2Bmexico%20%2Bright-wing&f=false}}</ref>
| membership = {{increase}} 277,665 (2023 {{estimation}})<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.ine.mx/actores-politicos/partidos-politicos-nacionales/padron-afiliados/ | title=Padrón de afiliados }}</ref>
|international = [[Centrist Democrat International]]
| ideology = [[Conservatism]]<ref name="Shirk-O'Toole-Cook">
| affiliation1_title = Regional affiliation
* {{cite book |first=David A. |last=Shirk |title=Mexico's New Politics: The PAN and Democratic Change |publisher=Lynne Rienner Publishers |year=2005 |page=57 |isbn=9781588262707 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WOBRb0wKpocC&pg=PA57}}
| affiliation1 = [[Christian Democrat Organization of America]]
* {{cite book |first=Gavin |last=O'Toole |title=Politics Latin America |publisher=Pearson Education |year=2007 |page=383 |isbn=9781405821292 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0A91Xz9leFMC&pg=PA383}}
|colors = [[Blue]] and [[White]]
* {{cite book |first=Rhodes |last=Cook|title=The Presidential Nominating Process: A Place for Us?|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1Lld7J5tZuwC&pg=PA118|year=2004|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-7425-2594-8|page=118}}</ref><br />[[Christian&nbsp;democracy]]<ref>{{cite book|first=Soledad|last=Loaeza|author-link=Soledad Loaeza|editor1-last=Mainwaring|editor1-first=Scott|editor2-last=Scully|editor2-first=Timothy R.|chapter=The Nationalist Action Party (PAN): From the Fringes of the Political System to the Heart of Change|title=Christian Democracy in Latin America: Electoral Competition and Regime Conflicts|publisher=[[Stanford University Press]]|year=2003|page=196|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ppe20kevrzgC&pg=PA196|isbn=0-8047-4598-6}}</ref>
|seats1_title = Seats in the [[Chamber of Deputies (Mexico)|Chamber of Deputies]]
| position = [[Centre-right politics|Centre-right]]<ref name="Graciela-Wiltse-Cornelius">
|seats1 = {{Infobox political party/seats|114|500|hex={{National Action Party (Mexico)/meta/color}}}}
* {{cite book |last1=Bensusán |first1=Graciela |last2=Middlebrook |first2=Kevin J. |title=Organized Labor and Politics in Mexico |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pkdDOyx5PDEC&pg=PA347 |work=The Oxford Handbook of Mexican Politics |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2012 |page=347|isbn=978-0-19-537738-5 }}
|seats2_title = Seats in the [[Senate (Mexico)|Senate]]
* {{cite book |last=Wiltse |first=Evren Çelik |title=Globalization and Mexico |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x-duhc2vyikC&pg=PA214 |work=Globalization: Universal trends, regional implications |publisher=University Press of New England |year=2007 |page=214|isbn=9781555536879 }}
|seats2 = {{Infobox political party/seats|38|128|hex={{National Action Party (Mexico)/meta/color}}}}
* {{cite book |first=Wayne A. |last=Cornelius |title=Mexicans Would Not Be Bought, Coerced |work=The Mexico Reader: History, Culture, Politics |publisher=Duke University Press |year=2002 |page=684 |isbn=0822330423 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zP07gHeWNA8C&pg=PA684}}</ref> to [[Right-wing politics|right-wing]]<ref name="Adler-Lomnitz-Mazza-Needler">
|seats3_title = [[List of Mexican state governors|Governorships]]
* {{cite book |last1=Adler-Lomnitz |first1=Larissa |author-link1=Larissa Adler Lomnitz |last2=Salazar-Elena |first2=Rodrigo |last3=Adler |first3=Ilya |title=Symbolism and Ritual in a One-Party Regime: Unveiling Mexico's Political Culture |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QkjFGSZA0OQC&pg=PA293 |publisher=University of Arizona Press |year=2010 |page=293|isbn=9780816527533 }}
|seats3 = {{Infobox political party/seats|6|32|hex={{National Action Party (Mexico)/meta/color}}}}
* {{cite book |last=Mazza |first=Jacqueline |title=Don't Disturb the Neighbors: The United States and Democracy in Mexico, 1980-1995 |publisher=Routledge |year=2001 |page=[https://archive.org/details/dontdisturbneigh0000mazz/page/9 9] |url=https://archive.org/details/dontdisturbneigh0000mazz|url-access=registration}}
|website = http://www.pan.org.mx/
* {{cite book |last=Needler |first=Martin C. |title=Mexican Politics: The Containment of Conflict |edition=3rd |publisher=Praeger Publishers |year=1995 |page=61 |isbn=9780275952518 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AOZdMLLx1t8C&pg=PA61}}</ref>
|footnotes =
| religion = [[Roman Catholicism]]<ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Mainwaring |editor1-first=Scott |editor2-last=Scully |editor2-first=Timothy R. |last=Loaeza |first=Soledad |author-link=Soledad Loaeza |chapter=The National Action Party (PAN): From the Fringes of the Political System to the Heart of Change |title=Christian Democracy in Latin America: Electoral Competition and Regime Conflicts|publisher=[[Stanford University Press]]|year=2003|page=196|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ppe20kevrzgC&pg=PA196|isbn=0-8047-4598-6}}</ref>
| newspaper = ''La Nación''
| affiliation1_title = {{nowrap|[[Electoral alliance]]}}
| affiliation1 = ''[[Broad Front for Mexico|Fuerza y Corazón por México]]''
| affiliation2_title = International affiliation
| affiliation2 = [[Centrist Democrat International]]<br />[[Christian Democrat Organization of America|ODCA]] (Regional)
| colours = {{colorbox|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}|border=darkgray}} Blue {{colorbox|white|border=darkgray}} White
| anthem = {{center|{{nobr|"Himno de Acción Nacional"<ref>{{cite book|title=Los Partidos Políticos En México Y La Sucesión Presidencial Del Año 2012|last1=Morales|first1=Antonio Lugo|date=8 March 2012|publisher=Palibrio|isbn=978-1463322823|page=91|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5QBNAAAAQBAJ|access-date=14 April 2022}}</ref>}}<br />({{lit|Anthem of National Action}})}}
| seats1_title = [[Chamber of Deputies (Mexico)|Chamber of Deputies]]
| seats1 = {{composition bar|71|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| seats2_title = [[Senate (Mexico)|Senate]]
| seats2 = {{composition bar|22|128|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| seats3_title = [[List of Mexican state governors|Governorships]]
| seats3 = {{composition bar|4|32|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| seats4_title = [[List of Mexican state legislatures|State legislatures]]
| seats4 = {{composition bar|214|1113|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| seats5_title = [[Municipalities of Mexico|Mayors]]
| seats5 = {{composition bar|312|2043|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| website = {{url|pan.org.mx}}
| country = Mexico
}}
}}
The '''National Action Party''' ({{lang-es|Partido Acción Nacional}}, PAN), is one of the three main [[Political party in Mexico|political parties in Mexico]]. Since 2000 and until 2012 the [[President of Mexico]] had been a member of this party; both houses have PAN pluralities, but the party does not have a majority in either house of the [[Congress of Mexico|Congress]]. In the [[Mexican elections, 2006|2006 legislative elections]] the party won 207 out of 500 seats in the [[Chamber of Deputies of Mexico|Chamber of Deputies]] and 52 out of 128 [[Senate of Mexico|Senators]]. In the 2012 Legislative Elections, the Pan won 38 seats in the Senate, and 114 seats in the Chamber of Deputies.<ref name="crsseelke">{{cite web|last=Seelke|first=Claire|title=Mexico’s 2012 Elections|url=http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/R42548.pdf|publisher=Congressional Research Service|accessdate=10 December 2012}}</ref>


The '''National Action Party''' ({{langx|es|link=no|Partido Acción Nacional}}, '''PAN''') is a [[Conservatism|conservative]] [[List of political parties in Mexico|political party in Mexico]] founded in 1939. It is one of the main political parties in the country, and since the 1980s has had success winning local, state, and national elections.
==History==


In the historic [[2000 Mexican general election]], PAN candidate [[Vicente Fox]] was elected president, the first time in 71 years that the Mexican presidency was not held by the traditional ruling party, the [[Institutional Revolutionary Party|PRI]]. Six years later, PAN candidate [[Felipe Calderón]] succeeded Fox following victory in the [[2006 Mexican general election|2006 presidential election]]. In 2000–2012, PAN was the strongest party in both houses of the [[Congress of the Union]] (the federal legislature) but lacked a majority in either house. In the [[2006 Mexican general election|2006 legislative elections]], the party won 207 out of 500 seats in the [[Chamber of Deputies of Mexico|Chamber of Deputies]] and 52 out of 128 [[Senate of Mexico|Senators]]. In the [[2012 Mexican general election|2012 legislative elections]], PAN won 38 seats in the Senate and 114 seats in the Chamber of Deputies,<ref name="crsseelke">{{cite web |last=Seelke |first=Claire |title=Mexico's 2012 Elections |url=http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/R42548.pdf |publisher=Congressional Research Service}}</ref> but the party did not win the presidential election in [[2012 Mexican general election|2012]] or [[2018 Mexican general election|2018]]. The members of this party are colloquially called ''Panistas''.

Notoriously, the two presidents of the Republic elected as PAN candidates (Vicente Fox and Felipe Calderón) have both left the party. Fox supported [[Institutional Revolutionary Party]] presidential candidates in 2012 and 2018, while Calderón founded his own party named "[[:es:México Libre|México Libre]]".

==History==
===20th century===
===20th century===
{{Christian Democracy sidebar}}
[[Mexico|Mexican]] [[Catholic Church|Roman Catholics]], together with other conservatives (mainly [[Manuel Gómez Morín]]), founded the National Action Party (PAN) on September 17, 1939, after the ''cristero'' insurgency was forced by the Mexican bishops to abandon the [[Cristero War]].<ref>{{cite book |title=The Rightward Drift of Mexico’s Former Revolutionaries: The Case of Antonio Díaz Soto y Gama |last=Lucas |first=Jeffrey Kent |year=2010 |publisher=Edwin Mellen Press |location=[[United States]] |isbn=978-0-7734-3665-7 |pages=199–227}}</ref> They were looking for a peaceful way to bring about change in the country and to achieve political representation, after the years of chaos and violence that followed the [[Mexican Revolution]]. The turning point in the Cristero War was when the [[Roman Catholic Church]] reached an agreement with the National Revolutionary Party (PRN) – the forerunner of the [[Institutional Revolutionary Party]] (PRI) that dominated the country for most of the 20th century until 1999 – under which it turned a blind eye to the lack of democracy in the country and stopped supporting the Catholic rebels, threatening its members with [[excommunication]] if they disobeyed the government.
{{Conservatism sidebar}}


====Founding====
In 1946, PAN members [[Miguel Ramírez Munguía]] ([[Tacámbaro]], [[Michoacán]]), [[Juan Gutiérrez Lascurain]] ([[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]]), [[Antonio L. Rodríguez]] ([[Nuevo León]]) and [[Aquiles Elorduy García]] ([[Aguascalientes]]) become the first four federal deputies from the opposition in post-Revolutionary Mexico. The following year [[Manuel Torres Serranía]], from [[Quiroga, Michoacán|Quiroga]], [[Michoacán]], becomes the party's first [[municipal president]] and [[Alfonso Hernández Sánchez]] (from [[Zamora, Michoacán|Zamora]], [[Michoacán]]) its first state deputy.<ref name="pan.org.mx">[http://www.pan.org.mx/?P=363 History of the PAN. PAN official website].</ref>
[[Image:Manuel Gomez Morin.jpg|left|thumb|[[Manuel Gómez Morín]], founder of the PAN in 1939]]
The National Action Party was founded in 1939 by [[Manuel Gómez Morín]], who had held a number of important government posts in the 1920s and 1930s. He saw the need for the creation of a permanent political party rather than an ephemeral organization to oppose the expansion of power by the post-revolutionary Mexican state.<ref>[[Soledad Loaeza]], "Partido de Acción Nacional (PAN)" in ''Encyclopedia of Mexico'', vol. 2, p. 1048. Chicago: Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997.</ref><ref>Vikram K. Chand, ''Mexico’s Political Awakening.'' Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press 2001.</ref> When Gómez Morín was rector of [[National Autonomous University of Mexico|UNAM]] between 1933 and 1935, the government attempted to impose socialist education. In defending academic freedom, Gómez Morín forged connections with individuals and groups that later came together in the foundation of the PAN in September 1939. The [[Jesuit]] student organization, Unión Nacional de Estudiantes Católicos (UNEC), provided a well-organized network of adherents who successfully fought the imposition of a particular ideological view by the state. Gómez Morín was not himself a militant Catholic, but he was a devout believer who rejected liberalism and individualism.<ref>Loaeza, "Partido de Acción Nacional", p. 1049.</ref> In 1939, Gómez Morín and a significant number of UNEC's leadership came together to found the PAN. The PAN's first executive committee and committees on political action and doctrine also had former Catholic student activists, including [[Luis Calderón Vega]], the father of [[Felipe Calderón]], who became President of Mexico in 2006.<ref>Espinosa, ''Jesuit Student Groups'', p. 73</ref> The PAN's "Doctrine of National Action" was strongly influenced by Catholic social doctrine articulated in ''[[Rerum novarum]]'' (1891) and ''[[Quadragesimo anno]]'' (1931) and rejected [[Marxism|Marxist]] models of [[Class conflict|class warfare]].<ref name="Espinosa, p. 73"/> The PAN's newspaper, ''La Nación'' was founded by another former UNEC member, Carlos Séptien García.<ref name="Espinosa, p. 73">Espinosa, ''Jesuit Student Groups'', p. 73.</ref>


The PAN originally brought together the Mexican socio-economic elite opposed to President [[Lázaro Cárdenas]]' reforms. In particular, it opposed his plan for free secular education, the nationalization of oil and land reform. The party, which at the time included personalities sympathetic to [[fascism]], campaigned for Mexico's neutrality during the [[Second World War]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Manzano |first=Alejandro |date=17 February 2021 |title=El legado de la derecha en Chihuahua |url=https://jacobinlat.com/2021/02/17/el-legado-de-la-derecha-en-chihuahua/ |access-date= |website=Jacobin Revista |language=es-AR}}</ref>
In 1962, [[Rosario Alcalá]] (Aguascalientes) became the first female candidate for state governor and two years later [[Florentina Villalobos Chaparro]] ([[Parral, Chihuahua|Parral]], [[Chihuahua (state)|Chihuahua]]), became the first female federal deputy. In 1967 [[Norma Villarreal de Zambrano]] ([[San Pedro Garza García]], [[Nuevo León]]) became the first female municipal president. In 1988, the newly created [[Assembly of Representatives of the Federal District]] had, for the first time, members of the PAN. In 1989, [[Ernesto Ruffo Appel]] (Baja California) became the first opposition governor. Two years later, his future successor in the Baja California government, [[Héctor Terán Terán]], became the first federal senator from the PAN. From 1992 to 2000, PAN candidates won the elections for governorships in [[Guanajuato]], [[Chihuahua (state)|Chihuahua]], [[Jalisco]], [[Querétaro]], [[Nuevo León]], [[Aguascalientes]], [[Yucatán]] and [[Morelos]].<ref name="pan.org.mx"/>

Efraín González Luna, a former member of the Mexican Catholic Student Union (Unión Nacional de Estudiantes Católicos) (UNEC), a long-time militant Catholic and practicing lawyer from Guadalajara, helped broker the party's informal alliance with the Catholic Church. However, the relationship between the PAN and the Catholic Church was not without tension. The party's founder Gómez Morín was leery of clerical oversight of the party, although its members were mainly urban Catholic professionals and businessmen. For its part, the Church hierarchy did not want to identify itself with a particular political party, since the [[Constitution of 1917]] forbade it. In the 1950s, the PAN, which had been seen to be Catholic in its makeup, became more ideologically secular.<ref name="Espinosa, p. 73"/>

====Electoral results====
The PAN initially was a party of "civic example", an independent [[loyal opposition]] that generally did not win elections at any level. However, in the 1980s it began a transformation to a political power, beginning at the local and state levels in the North of Mexico.<ref>Vikram K. Chand, ''Mexico's Political Awakening'', see especially chapter 3 "The Transformation of Mexico’s National Action Party (PAN): From Civic Example to Political Power."</ref> A split in the PAN occurred in 1977, with the pro-Catholic faction and the more secular wing splitting. The PAN had updated its positions following the [[Second Vatican Council]], toward a greater affinity for the poor; however, more traditional Catholics were critical of that stance and nonreligious groups were also in opposition, since they wanted the party to be less explicitly Catholic and draw in more urban professionals and business groups, who would vote for a nonreligious opposition party. The conflict came to a head, and in 1977 the progressive Catholic wing left the party.<ref>Loaeza, "Partido de Acción Nacional", p. 1051.</ref>

The PAN had strength in Northern Mexico and its candidates had won elections earlier on, but these victories were small in comparison to those of the [[Institutional Revolutionary Party]]. In 1946, PAN members [[:es:Miguel Ramírez Munguía|Miguel Ramírez Munguía]] ([[Tacámbaro]], [[Michoacán]]), [[:es:Juan Gutiérrez Lascurain|Juan Gutiérrez Lascurain]] ([[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]]), Antonio L. Rodríguez ([[Nuevo León]]) and Aquiles Elorduy García ([[Aguascalientes]]) became the first four federal deputies from the opposition in post-revolutionary Mexico.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} The following year, Manuel Torres Serranía from [[Quiroga, Michoacán|Quiroga]], Michoacán became the party's first [[municipal president]] and Alfonso Hernández Sánchez (from [[Zamora, Michoacán|Zamora]], Michoacán) its first state deputy.<ref name="pan.org.mx">[http://www.pan.org.mx/?P=363 History of the PAN. PAN official website].</ref> In 1962, Rosario Alcalá (Aguascalientes) became the first female candidate for state governor and two years later [[Florentina Villalobos Chaparro]] ([[Parral, Chihuahua|Parral]], [[Chihuahua (state)|Chihuahua]]) became the first female federal deputy.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} In 1967, Norma Villarreal de Zambrano ([[San Pedro Garza García]], [[Nuevo León]]) became the first female municipal president.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}}

[[File:Logo Acción Juvenil.png|right|thumb|Acción Juvenil official logo]]
Until the 1980s, the PAN was a weak opposition party that was considered pro-Catholic and pro-business, but never garnered many votes. Its strength, however, was that it was pro-democracy and pro-rule of law, so that its political profile was in contrast to the dominant Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) that was widely and increasingly seen as corrupt. The PAN came to be viewed as viable opposition party for a wider range of voters as it became more secular and as Mexicans increasingly moved to cities. As the PAN increasingly called for end of fraud in Mexican elections, it appealed to a wider range of people.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}}

In 1988, the newly created [[Assembly of Representatives of the Federal District]] had, for the first time, members of the PAN. In 1989, [[Ernesto Ruffo Appel]] (Baja California) became the first opposition governor.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} Two years later, his future successor in the Baja California government, [[Héctor Terán Terán]], became the first federal senator from the PAN.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} From 1992 to 2000, PAN candidates won the elections for governorships in [[Guanajuato]], [[Chihuahua (state)|Chihuahua]], [[Jalisco]], [[Querétaro]], [[Nuevo León]], [[Aguascalientes]], [[Yucatán (state)|Yucatán]] and [[Morelos]].<ref name="pan.org.mx"/>


===21st century===
===21st century===
====Electoral victory for the presidency, 2000====
[[File:Mexico Governors map.svg|thumb|390px|{{Legend|#0044AA|States governed by PAN}}]]
[[File:Vicente Fox 2.jpg|thumb|right|[[Vicente Fox]], first PANista to be elected president of Mexico (2000–06), ended more than 70 years of PRI rule.]]
In the [[Mexican general election, 2000|2000 presidential elections]], the candidate of the ''[[Alianza por el cambio]]'' ("Alliance for Change"), formed by the PAN and the [[Ecologist Green Party of Mexico]] (PVEM), [[Vicente Fox Quesada]] won 42.5% of the popular vote and was elected [[president of Mexico]]. In the [[Mexican general election, 2000|senate elections]] of the same date, the Alliance won 46 out of 128 seats in the Senate. The Alliance broke off the following year and the PVEM has since participated together with the PRI in most elections.
In the [[2000 Mexican general election|2000 presidential elections]], the candidate of the ''[[Alianza por el Cambio]]'' ("Alliance for Change"), formed by the PAN and the [[Ecologist Green Party of Mexico]] (PVEM), [[Vicente Fox Quesada]] won 42.5% of the popular vote and was elected [[president of Mexico]]. Fox was the first opposition candidate to defeat the candidate of the [[Institutional Revolutionary Party]] (PRI) and its precursors after 71 years. It was a significant victory not only for the PAN, but Mexican democracy.
In the [[2003 Mexican elections|2003 mid-term elections]], the party won 30.74% of the popular vote and 153 out of 500 seats in the Chamber of Deputies.


In the [[2000 Mexican general election|senate elections]] of the same date, the Alliance won 46 out of 128 seats in the Senate. The Alliance broke off the following year and the PVEM has since participated together with the PRI in most elections.
In 2003, the PAN lost the governorship of [[Nuevo León]] to the PRI and, the following year, failed to win back the state of [[Chihuahua (state)|Chihuahua]] from the PRI. Coupled with a bitterly fought election in [[Colima]] that was cancelled and later re-run, these developments were interpreted by some political analysts to be a significant rejection of the PAN in advance of the [[Mexican general election, 2006|2006 presidential election]]. In contrast, 2004 did see the PAN win for the first time in [[Tlaxcala]], in a state that would not normally be considered PAN territory, although its candidate was a member of the PRI until a few months before the elections. It also managed to hold on to [[Querétaro]] (by a mere 3% margin against the PRI) and [[Aguascalientes]] (although in 2007, it lost most of the municipalities and the local Congress to the PRI). However, in 2005 the PAN lost the elections for the state government of [[Mexico State]] and [[Nayarit]] to the PRI. The former was considered one of the most important elections in the country because of the number of voters involved, which is higher than the elections for head of government of the [[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]]. (See: [[2003 Mexican elections]], [[2004 Mexican elections]] and [[2005 Mexican elections]] for results.)
[[File:Felipe Calderon H.jpg|thumb|right|[[Felipe Calderón]], President of Mexico (2006–12)]]
[[File:Gobernadores mexicanos (2024).png|thumb|360px|left|{{legend|#05338D}}States governed by the PAN ({{currentyear}})]]


In the [[2003 Mexican elections|2003 mid-term elections]], the party won 30.74% of the popular vote and 153 out of 500 seats in the Chamber of Deputies. In 2003, the PAN lost the governorship of [[Nuevo León]] to the PRI and, the following year, failed to win back the state of [[Chihuahua (state)|Chihuahua]] from the PRI. Coupled with a bitterly fought election in [[Colima]] that was cancelled and later re-run, these developments were interpreted by some political analysts to be a significant rejection of the PAN in advance of the [[2006 Mexican general election|2006 presidential election]]. In contrast, 2004 did see the PAN win for the first time in [[Tlaxcala]], in a state that would not normally be considered PAN territory, although its candidate was a member of the PRI until a few months before the elections. It also managed to hold on to [[Querétaro]] (by a mere 3% margin against the PRI) and [[Aguascalientes]] (although in 2007, it lost most of the municipalities and the local Congress to the PRI). However, in 2005 the PAN lost the elections for the state government of [[Mexico State]] and [[Nayarit]] to the PRI. The former was considered one of the most important elections in the country because of the number of voters involved, which is higher than the elections for head of government of the [[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]]. (See: [[2003 Mexican elections]], [[2004 Mexican elections]] and [[2005 Mexican elections]] for results.)
For the [[Mexican general election, 2006|presidential election in 2006]], [[Felipe Calderón]], a former party president, was selected as the PAN's candidate, after beating his opponents [[Santiago Creel]] ([[Secretary of the Interior (Mexico)|Secretary of the Interior]] during Fox's term) and [[Alberto Cárdenas]] (former [[governor of Jalisco]]) in every voting round in the party primaries. On July 2, 2006, Felipe Calderón secured a plurality of the votes cast. Finishing less than one percent behind was [[Andrés Manuel López Obrador]], who challenged the results of the election on possible grounds of electoral fraud. In addition to the presidency, the PAN won 206 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 52 in the Senate, securing it the largest single party blocs in both houses.

Significantly in the 2006 [[2006 Mexican general election|presidential election in 2006]], the PAN candidate [[Felipe Calderón]] was elected to succeed Vicente Fox. Calderón was the son of one of the founders of the PAN, and was himself a former party president. He was selected as the PAN's candidate, after beating his opponents [[Santiago Creel]] ([[Secretary of the Interior (Mexico)|Secretary of the Interior]] during Fox's term) and [[Alberto Cárdenas]] (former [[governor of Jalisco]]) in every voting round in the party primaries. On 2 July 2006, Felipe Calderón secured a plurality of the votes cast. Finishing less than one percent behind was [[Andrés Manuel López Obrador]], who challenged the results of the election on possible grounds of electoral fraud. In addition to the presidency, the PAN won 206 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 52 in the Senate, securing it the largest single party blocs in both houses.


In 2007, the PAN lost the governorship and the majority in the [[Congress of Yucatán|state congress of Yucatán]] to the PRI as well as the municipal presidency of [[Aguascalientes, Aguascalientes|Aguascalientes]], but kept both the governorship and the majority in the [[Congress of Baja California|state congress of Baja California]]. The PRI also obtained more municipal presidents and local congresspeople in Chihuahua, Durango, Zacatecas, Aguascalientes, Chiapas and Oaxaca. The PRD obtained more posts than the PAN in Zacatecas, Chiapas and Oaxaca.
In 2007, the PAN lost the governorship and the majority in the [[Congress of Yucatán|state congress of Yucatán]] to the PRI as well as the municipal presidency of [[Aguascalientes, Aguascalientes|Aguascalientes]], but kept both the governorship and the majority in the [[Congress of Baja California|state congress of Baja California]]. The PRI also obtained more municipal presidents and local congresspeople in Chihuahua, Durango, Zacatecas, Aguascalientes, Chiapas and Oaxaca. The PRD obtained more posts than the PAN in Zacatecas, Chiapas and Oaxaca.


In 2009, the PAN held 33 seats in the Senate and 142 seats in the Chamber of deputies.<ref name="crsseelke" />
In 2009, the PAN held 33 seats in the Senate and 142 seats in the Chamber of deputies.<ref name="crsseelke"/>


====Return of the PRI to presidency====
In 2012, the PAN lost the Presidential Election to [[Enrique Peña Nieto]] of the [[Institutional Revolutionary Party|PRI]]. They also won 38 seats in the Senate (a gain of 3 seats), and 114 seats in the Chamber of Deputies (a loss of 28 seats).<ref name="crsseelke" />
In 2012, the PAN lost the Presidential Election to [[Enrique Peña Nieto]] of the [[Institutional Revolutionary Party|PRI]]. They also won 38 seats in the Senate (a gain of 3 seats), and 114 seats in the Chamber of Deputies (a loss of 28 seats).<ref name="crsseelke"/> The government of president of Mexico [[Enrique Peña Nieto|Enrique Peña Nieto (EPN)]] has faced multiple scandals, and allegations of corruption. Reforma who has run surveys of presidential approval since 1995, revealed EPN had received a mere 12% approval rating, the lowest since they started to survey for presidential approval.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/why-mexican-president-enrique-pe-nieto-so-unpopular-n640611|title=Why Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto is so unpopular|website=[[NBC News]]|date=31 August 2016 }}</ref>


==Ideology==
==Ideology==
[[File:Diego_Fernandez_de_Cevallos.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[Diego Fernandez de Cevallos]]]]
{{Christian Democracy sidebar}}
The PAN has been linked to a conservative stance in Mexican politics since its inception, but the party does not consider itself a fundamentally conservative party. The party ideology, at least in principle, is that of "National Action" which rejects a fundamental adherence to left- or right-wing politics or policies, instead requiring the adoption of such policies as correspond to the problems faced by the nation at any given moment. Thus both right- and left-wing policies may be considered equally carefully in formulation of national policy.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3b74ZwxJaM4C&dq=ideolog%C3%ADa+del+partido+acci%C3%B3n+nacional&pg=PA291 |title=Partido Acción Nacional—los signos de la institucionalización |date=2002 |publisher=UNAM |isbn=978-970-637-123-2 |language=es}}</ref>
{{Conservatism sidebar}}
The PAN has been linked to a [[Conservatism|conservative]] stance in Mexican politics since its inception, but the party does not consider itself a fundamentally conservative party. The party ideology, at least in principle, is that of "National Action" which rejects a fundamental adherence to left- or right-wing politics or policies, instead requiring the adoption of such policies as correspond to the problems faced by the nation at any given moment. Thus both right- and left-wing policies may be considered equally carefully in formulation of national policy. (This is a similar theoretical basis as both [[Gaullism]] and [[Peronism]], although the similarity is weakened in the late authoritarian stance of [[Juan Perón|Perón]].)


This theory of National Action politics, rejecting a fundamental adherence to right or left, is held within a strongly Christian context, and falls under the umbrella of [[Christian democracy]].{{Citation needed|date=August 2011}}
This theory of National Action politics, rejecting a fundamental adherence to right or left, is held within a strongly Christian context, and falls under the umbrella of [[Christian democracy]].<ref name=":0" />


The party theory was largely developed by early figures such as [[Manuel Gómez Morín|Gómez Morín]] and his associates. However, some observers consider the PAN claim to National Action politics to be weakened by the apparent persistent predominance of conservatism in PAN policy in practice.
The party theory was largely developed by early figures such as [[Manuel Gómez Morín|Gómez Morín]] and his associates. However, some observers consider the PAN claim to National Action politics to be weakened by the apparent persistent predominance of conservatism in PAN policy in practice. The PAN has similarities with Europe and Latin America's [[Christian democratic]] parties.<ref name=":0" />


===Economic policies===
===Economic policies===
The PAN currently occupies the [[Right wing|right]] of Mexico's political spectrum, advocating [[free enterprise]], [[privatization]], [[Small government|smaller government]], and [[Liberalism|liberal]] reforms as well as opposition to [[Civil unions in Mexico|same-sex unions]] and [[Abortion in Mexico|abortion]]. Its philosophy has similarities with [[Europe]]'s Christian democratic parties. The PAN is a member of the [[Christian Democrat Organization of America]]. In general, NAP claims to support free enterprise and thus [[trade agreement]]s.
The PAN currently occupies the [[Right wing|right]] of Mexico's political spectrum, advocating [[free enterprise]], [[pragmatism]], [[small government]], [[privatization]] and [[libertarianism|libertarian]] reforms as well. The PAN is a member of the [[Christian Democrat Organization of America]]. In general, PAN claims to support free enterprise and thus [[free trade agreement]]s.{{citation needed|date=December 2014}}


===Social policies===
===Social policies===
====Abortion====
====Abortion====
{{Main|Abortion in Mexico}}
{{Main|Abortion in Mexico}}
[[Image:Luis Felipe Bravo Mena.jpg|right|thumb|[[Luis Felipe Bravo]]]]
[[Carlos Abascal]], secretary of the interior in the latter part of the [[Vicente Fox|Fox]] administration, called [[emergency contraception]] a "[[weapons of mass destruction|weapon of mass destruction]]" in July 2005.<ref name="segob-pills">[http://www.segob.gob.mx/templetas/boletin.php?id=4048 Secretaría de Gobernación], July 19, 2005.</ref> It was during Fox's term, however, that the "morning-after" pill was legalized, even though the Church had condemned the use of these kind of pills, calling them "abortion pills".
[[Carlos Abascal]], secretary of the interior in the latter part of the [[Vicente Fox|Fox]] administration, called [[emergency contraception]] a "[[weapons of mass destruction|weapon of mass destruction]]" in July 2005.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.segob.gob.mx/templetas/boletin.php?id=4048 |title=PALABRAS DEL SECRETARIO DE GOBERNACIÓN, CARLOS ABASCAL CARRANZA, DURANTE EL DESAYUNO CON DIRECTIVOS DEL CENTRO DE REHABILITACIÓN INTEGRAL TELETON (CRIT) TLALNEPANTLA Y DIRECTIVOS DE LOS MEDIOS DE COMUNICACIÓN |agency=Secretaría de Gobernación |date=19 July 2005 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928181732/http://www.segob.gob.mx/templetas/boletin.php?id=4048 |archive-date=28 September 2007 |language=es}}</ref> It was during Fox's term, however, that the "morning-after" pill was legalized, even though the [[Catholic Church in Mexico|Church]] had condemned the use of these kind of pills, calling them "abortion pills".


The PAN produced a television spot against state-financed abortion, one that features popular comedian [[Roberto Gómez Bolaños|Chespirito]] (who was also featured on a TV spot promoting Vicente Fox in the 2000 presidential elections) and a second one that accuses the PRI and PRD of wanting to kill the unborn.<ref name="Frontera-abortion-tv">[http://www.frontera.info/EdicionEnLinea/Notas/Nacional/26042007/233872.aspx ''Frontera''], ''Difunde PAN spot Vs. aborto en Internet'', April 26, 2007.</ref> After the abortion bill, which made abortion available, anonymous, and free or government-paid, was approved at the local legislature, the PAN requested the Human Rights Commission of the [[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]] (CDHDF) to enact actions on the unconstitutionality of the measure, the CDHDF rejected the request as it found no basis of unconstitutionality.<ref name="cdhdf-abortion">[http://www.cdhdf.org.mx/index.php?id=bol8507 Human Rights Commission of the Federal District], ''CDHDF NO EJERCERÁ ACCIÓN DE INCONSTITUCIONALIDAD'', May 3, 2007.</ref> After unsuccessfully appealing to unconstitutionality, the PAN declared that it may request the remotion of [[Emilio Álvarez Icaza]], the president of the [[Human Rights Commission of the Federal District]], for his lack of moral quality.<ref name = "cronica-abortion">[http://www.cronica.com.mx/nota.php?id_nota=299234 La Crónica], ''El PAN-DF, molesto porque Álvarez Icaza apoyó la despenalización, ahora pide la cabeza del ombudsman'', May 5, 2007</ref> The PAN, with the members of the Association of Catholic Lawyers, gathered signatures and turned them in to the Federal District Electoral Institute (IEDF) to void the abortion bill and force a referendum,<ref name="soldemexico-abortion">[http://www.oem.com.mx/elsoldemexico/notas/n267756.htm El Sol de México], ''Invalida IEDF solicitud de referendum sobre el aborto''.</ref> which was also rejected by the IEDF. In May 2007, the PAN started a campaign to encourage rejections to perform abortion amongst doctors in the Federal District based on conscience.<ref name="jornada-abortion-fliers">[http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2007/05/08/inicia-pan-df-campana-medica-contra-el-aborto ''La Jornada''], ''Inicia PAN-DF campaña contra el aborto en hospitales'', May 8, 2007.</ref>
The PAN produced a television spot against state-financed abortion, one that features popular comedian [[Roberto Gómez Bolaños|Chespirito]] (who was also featured on a TV spot promoting Vicente Fox in the 2000 presidential elections) and a second one that accuses the PRI and PRD of wanting to kill the unborn.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.frontera.info/EdicionEnLinea/Notas/Nacional/26042007/233872.aspx |title=Difunde PAN spot Vs. aborto en Internet |newspaper=Frontera |date=26 April 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080120151434/http://www.frontera.info/EdicionEnLinea/Notas/Nacional/26042007/233872.aspx |archive-date=20 January 2008 |language=es}}</ref> After the abortion bill, which made abortion available, anonymous, and free or government-paid, was approved at the local legislature, the PAN requested the Human Rights Commission of the [[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]] (CDHDF) to enact actions on the unconstitutionality of the measure, the CDHDF rejected the request as it found no basis of unconstitutionality.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.cronica.com.mx/notas/2007/300241.html |title=Improcedente, acción de inconstitucionalidad contra aborto: CDHDF |date=11 May 2007 |newspaper=La Crónica |language=es}}</ref> After unsuccessfully appealing to unconstitutionality, the PAN declared that it may request the remotion of [[Emilio Álvarez Icaza]], the president of the Human Rights Commission of the Federal District, for his lack of moral quality.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.cronica.com.mx/nota.php?id_nota=299234 |newspaper=La Crónica |title=El PAN-DF, molesto porque Álvarez Icaza apoyó la despenalización, ahora pide la cabeza del ombudsman |date=5 May 2007 |language=es}}</ref> The PAN, with the members of the Association of Catholic Lawyers, gathered signatures and turned them in to the Federal District Electoral Institute (IEDF) to void the abortion bill and force a referendum,<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.oem.com.mx/elsoldemexico/notas/n267756.htm |title=Invalida IEDF solicitud de referendum sobre el aborto |newspaper=El Sol de México |language=es |date=7 May 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927230738/http://www.oem.com.mx/elsoldemexico/notas/n267756.htm |archive-date=27 September 2007}}</ref> which was also rejected by the IEDF. In May 2007, the PAN started a campaign to encourage rejections to perform abortion among doctors in the Federal District based on conscience.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2007/05/08/inicia-pan-df-campana-medica-contra-el-aborto |newspaper=La Jornada |title=Inicia PAN-DF campaña contra el aborto en hospitals |date=8 May 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071217044045/http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2007/05/08/inicia-pan-df-campana-medica-contra-el-aborto |archive-date=17 December 2007 |language=es}}</ref>


====Recognition of '''sex''' unions in Mexico====
====Opposition to same-sex unions in Mexico====
{{Main|Recognition of same-sex unions in Mexico}}
{{Main|Recognition of same-sex unions in Mexico}}
The PAN has opposed measures to establish civil unions in Mexico City and Coahuila. On November 9, 2006, the government of the [[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]] approved the first law establishing [[civil unions in Mexico]]. The members of the PAN, and a member of [[New Alliance Party (Mexico)|New Alliance]] were the only legislators that voted against it.<ref name="universal-civilunions">[http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/386988.html El Universal], ''Aprueban la Ley de Sociedades de Convivencia'', November 9, 2007.</ref>
The PAN has opposed measures to establish civil unions in Mexico City and [[Coahuila]]. On 9 November 2006, the government of the [[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]] approved the first law establishing [[civil unions in Mexico]]. The members of the PAN, and a member of [[New Alliance Party (Mexico)|New Alliance]] were the only legislators that voted against it.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/386988.html |newspaper=El Universal |title=Aprueban la Ley de Sociedades de Convivencia |date=10 November 2006 |language=es}}</ref>


The same year, the local legislature of [[Coahuila]] approved the law of civil unions to which the PAN also opposed.<ref>[http://www.eldiariodecoahuila.com.mx/index.php?id=16154 El Diario de Coahuila], ''Júbilo en comunidad gay''.</ref> The PAN also lodged an unconstitutionality plea before the Supreme Court of Justice of the State of Coahuila, alleging that the constitution has vowed to protect the institution of the family.<ref name="hispavista">[http://noticias.hispavista.com/internacional/20070211020013/Mexico-Legisladores-mexicanos-presentan-recurso-ante-la-Suprema-Corte-de-Justicia-contra-la-ley-de-uniones-civiles/ Hispavista]</ref>
The same year, the local legislature of [[Coahuila]] approved the law of civil unions to which the PAN also opposed.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1795588/posts |title=New law propels gay rights in Mexico – (Coahuila moves boldly with civil unions as nation watches) |website=Free Republic |date=5 March 2007}}</ref> The PAN also lodged an unconstitutionality plea before the Supreme Court of Justice of the State of Coahuila, alleging that the constitution has vowed to protect the institution of the family.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://noticias.hispavista.com/internacional/20070211020013/Mexico-Legisladores-mexicanos-presentan-recurso-ante-la-Suprema-Corte-de-Justicia-contra-la-ley-de-uniones-civiles/ |website=Hispavista |title=Legisladores mexicanos presentan recurso ante la Suprema Corte de Justicia contra la ley de uniones civiles |date=11 February 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071113134826/http://noticias.hispavista.com/internacional/20070211020013/Mexico-Legisladores-mexicanos-presentan-recurso-ante-la-Suprema-Corte-de-Justicia-contra-la-ley-de-uniones-civiles/ |archive-date=13 November 2007 |language=es}}</ref>


Guillermo Bustamente Manilla, a member of the PAN and the president of the National Parents Union (UNPF) is the father of Guillermo Bustamante Artasánchez, a law director of the [[Secretary of the Interior (Mexico)|Secretary of the Interior]], Carlos Abascal, during Fox's presidency and is currently working in the Calderón administration against abortion and same-sex civil unions.<ref ="proceso-unpf">[http://www.proceso.com.mx/analisis_int.html?an=50027 Proceso], ''Calderón, cómplice del clero'', April 23, 2007.</ref> He called the latter as "anti-natural."<ref name="oax-unpf">[http://www.noticias-oax.com.mx/articulos.php?id_sec=14&id_art=52132 Noticias, Voz e Imágen de Oaxaca], March 16, 2007</ref> He has publicly asked voters not to cast votes for "abortionist" parties and those who are in favor of homosexual relationships.<ref ="aciprensa-unpf">[http://www.aciprensa.com/noticia.php?n=16666 ACI Prensa], ''Padres de familia mexicanos piden no votar por partidos abortistas'', April 30, 2007.</ref>
Guillermo Bustamente Manilla, a member of the PAN and the president of the National Parents Union (UNPF) is the father of Guillermo Bustamante Artasánchez, a law director of the [[Secretary of the Interior (Mexico)|Secretary of the Interior]], Carlos Abascal, during Fox's presidency and worked in the Calderón administration against abortion and same-sex civil unions.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.proceso.com.mx/207384 |magazine=Proceso |title=Calderón, cómplice del clero |date=24 April 2007 |language=es}}</ref> He called the latter as "anti-natural."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.noticias-oax.com.mx/articulos.php?id_sec=14&id_art=52132 |title=Mexico City's law on civil unions draws mixed reaction |newspaper=Noticias de Oaxaca |date=16 March 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927021509/http://www.noticias-oax.com.mx/articulos.php?id_sec=14&id_art=52132 |archive-date=27 September 2007}}</ref> He has publicly asked voters not to cast votes for "abortionist" parties and those who are in favor of homosexual relationships.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.aciprensa.com/noticia.php?n=16666 |work=ACI Prensa |title=Padres de familia mexicanos piden no votar por partidos abortistas |date=30 April 2007 |language=es}}</ref>


==Other issues==
==Party presidents==
*[[Manuel Gómez Morín]] 1939–1949
In some cases, PAN mayors and governors have banned public employees from wearing [[miniskirt]]s ([[Guadalajara, Jalisco|Guadalajara]]), clamped down on the use of [[profanity]] in public marketplaces ([[Santiago de Querétaro]]), and the last and most polemical had to be with the mayor of [[Guanajuato, Guanajuato|Guanajuato]], who tried to prevent couples from kissing on the streets, although this law did not pass.{{citation needed|date = September 2009}}
*Juan Gutiérrez Lascuráin 1949–1956

*Alfonso Ituarte Servín 1956–1959
==Party Presidents==
*[[José González Torres]] 1959–1962
*[[Manuel Gómez Morín]] 1939-1949
*[[Adolfo Christlieb Ibarrola]] 1962–1968<ref>{{cite web |url=http://memoriapoliticademexico.org/Biografias/CIA19.html |title=Biography of Adolfo Christlieb Ibarrola |website=Memoria Política de México}}</ref>
*Juan Gutiérrez Lascuráin 1949-1956
*Ignacio Limón Maurer 1968–1969
*Alfonso Ituarte Servín 1956-1959
*José González Torres 1959-1962
*Manuel González Hinojosa 1969–1972
*José Ángel Conchelo Dávila 1972–1975
*[[Adolfo Christlieb Ibarrola]] 1962-1968 [http://www.fundacion-christlieb.org.mx/fundacion-ac/adolfo-christlieb.html]
*Ignacio Limón Maurer 1968-1969
*Manuel González Hinojosa 1969-1972
*José Ángel Conchelo Dávila 1972-1975
*Efraín González Morfín 1975<sup>1</sup>
*Efraín González Morfín 1975<sup>1</sup>
*Raúl González Schmall 1975 ''(interim)''
*Raúl González Schmall 1975 ''(interim)''
*Manuel González Hinojosa 1975-1978
*Manuel González Hinojosa 1975–1978
*Avel Vicencio Tovar 1978-1984
*Avel Vicencio Tovar 1978–1984
*[[Pablo Emilio Madero]] 1984-1987
*[[Pablo Emilio Madero]] 1984–1987
*[[Luis H. Álvarez]] 1987-1993
*[[Luis H. Álvarez]] 1987–1993
*[[Carlos Castillo Peraza]] 1993-1996
*[[Carlos Castillo Peraza]] 1993–1996
*[[Felipe Calderón Hinojosa]] 1996-1999
*[[Felipe Calderón]] 1996–1999
*[[Luis Felipe Bravo Mena]] 1999-2005
*[[Luis Felipe Bravo Mena]] 1999–2005
*[[Manuel Espino Barrientos]] 2005-2007
*[[Manuel Espino Barrientos]] 2005–2007
*[[Germán Martínez Cázares]] 2007-2009
*[[Germán Martínez Cázares]] 2007–2009
*César Nava Vázquez 2009-2010
*César Nava Vázquez 2009–2010
*[[Gustavo Madero Muñoz]] 2010-Current
*[[Gustavo Madero Muñoz]] 2010–2014
*Cecilia Romero Castillo 2014

*[[Ricardo Anaya]] 2014–2015
*[[Gustavo Madero Muñoz]] 2015
*[[Ricardo Anaya]] 2015–2017<sup>1</sup>
*[[Damián Zepeda Vidales]] 2017–2018
*[[Marcelo Torres Cofiño]] 2018
*[[Marko Antonio Cortés Mendoza|Marko Cortés Mendoza]] 2018–present
<sub>''1.- Resigned to run for president ''</sub>
<sub>''1.- Resigned to run for president ''</sub>


==Election results==
==Presidential candidates==
===Presidential elections===
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Election
! Candidate
! # votes
! % vote
! Result
! Note
|-
! [[1952 Mexican general election|1952]]
| [[Efraín González Luna]]
| 285,555
| 7.8
| {{N}} Defeated
|
|-
! [[1958 Mexican general election|1958]]
| [[Luis H. Álvarez]]
| 705,303
| 9.4
| {{N}} Defeated
|
|-
! [[1964 Mexican general election|1964]]
| [[José González Torres]]
| 1,034,337
| 11.0
| {{N}} Defeated
|
|-
! [[1970 Mexican general election|1970]]
| [[Efraín González Morfín]]
| 1,945,070
| 14.0
| {{N}} Defeated
|
|-
! [[1976 Mexican general election|1976]]
| ''No Candidate''
| colspan="2" |
| {{N}} Did not run
|
|-
! [[1982 Mexican general election|1982]]
| [[Pablo Emilio Madero]]
| 3,700,045
| 16.4
| {{N}} Defeated
|
|-
! [[1988 Mexican general election|1988]]
| [[Manuel Clouthier]]
| 3,208,584
| 16.8
| {{N}} Defeated
|
|-
! [[1994 Mexican general election|1994]]
| [[Diego Fernández de Cevallos]]
| 9,146,841
| 25.9
| {{N}} Defeated
|
|-
! [[2000 Mexican general election|2000]]
| [[Vicente Fox]]
| 15,989,636
| 42.5
| {{Y}} '''Elected'''
| Coalition: [[Alliance for Change (Mexico)|Alianza por el Cambio]]
|-
! [[2006 Mexican general election|2006]]
| [[Felipe Calderón]]
| 15,000,284
| 35.8
| {{Y}} '''Elected'''
|
|-
! [[2012 Mexican general election|2012]]
| [[Josefina Vázquez Mota]]
| 12,786,647
| 25.4
| {{N}} Defeated
|
|-
! [[2018 Mexican general election|2018]]
| [[Ricardo Anaya]]
| 12,609,472
| 22.3
| {{N}} Defeated
| Coalition: [[Por México al Frente]]
|-
! [[2024 Mexican general election|2024]]
| [[Xóchitl Gálvez]]
| 16,502,697
| 28.11
| {{N}} Defeated
| Coalition: [[Fuerza y Corazón por México]]
|}


===Congressional elections===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
Note: Only elections where the party won seats are listed.
|- style="background:#cccccc"

! Election Year !! Result !! Nominee
====Chamber of Deputies====
|- style="background:#dddddd"
{| class="wikitable"
|- style="background:#dddddd"
|-
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
! rowspan="2"| Election
|| 1952 || lost || Efraín González Luna
! colspan="2"| Constituency
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
! colspan="2"| PR
|| 1958 || lost || [[Luis H. Álvarez]]
! rowspan="2"| # of seats
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
! rowspan="2"| Position
|| 1964 || lost || José Luis González Torres
! colspan="2" rowspan="2"|Presidency
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
! rowspan="2"| Note
|| 1970 || lost || Efraín González Morfín
|-
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
! votes
|| 1976 || ''No Result'' || ''No Candidate''
! %
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
! votes
|| 1982 || lost || [[Pablo Emilio Madero]]
! %
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
|-
|| [[Mexican general election, 1988|1988]] || lost || [[Manuel Clouthier|Manuel J. Clouthier]]
! [[1946 Mexican general election|1946]]
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
| style="text-align:right" | 51,312
|| [[Mexican general election, 1994|1994]] || lost || [[Diego Fernández de Cevallos]]
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
| style="text-align:right" | 2.2
| colspan="2" rowspan="4" style="background:#ccc;" |
|| [[Mexican general election, 2000|2000]] ||''' won''' || '''[[Vicente Fox|Vicente Fox Quesada]]'''
| {{composition bar|4|147|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
|| [[Mexican general election, 2006|2006]] || '''won''' || '''[[Felipe Calderón|Felipe Calderón Hinojosa]]'''
| [[Miguel Alemán Valdés]]
|- style="background:#ddeeff"
| [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|| [[Mexican general election, 2012|2012]]'' || lost || [[Josefina Vázquez Mota]]
|
|-
! [[1952 Mexican general election|1952]]
| style="text-align:right" | 301,986
| style="text-align:right" | 8.3
| {{composition bar|5|161|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Adolfo Ruiz Cortines]]
| [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[1958 Mexican general election|1958]]
| style="text-align:right" | 749,519
| style="text-align:right" | 10.2
| {{composition bar|6|162|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Adolfo López Mateos]]
| [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[1964 Mexican general election|1964]]
| style="text-align:right" | 1,042,396
| style="text-align:right" | 11.5
| {{composition bar|20|210|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Gustavo Díaz Ordaz]]
| [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[1970 Mexican general election|1970]]
| style="text-align:right" | 1,893,289
| style="text-align:right" | 14.2
| style="text-align:right" |
| style="text-align:right" |
| {{composition bar|20|213|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Luis Echeverría Álvarez]]
| [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[1976 Mexican general election|1976]]
| style="text-align:right" | 1,358,403
| style="text-align:right" | 9.0
| style="text-align:right" |
| style="text-align:right" |
| {{composition bar|20|237|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[José López Portillo]] || [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[1982 Mexican general election|1982]]
| style="text-align:right" | 3,663,846
| style="text-align:right" | 17.5
| style="text-align:right" |
| style="text-align:right" |
| {{composition bar|51|400|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Miguel de la Madrid]]
| [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[1988 Mexican general election|1988]]
| style="text-align:right" | 3,276,824
| style="text-align:right" | 18.0
| style="text-align:right" |
| style="text-align:right" |
| {{composition bar|101|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Carlos Salinas de Gortari]]
| [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[1994 Mexican general election|1994]]
| style="text-align:right" | 8,664,834
| style="text-align:right" | 25.8
| style="text-align:right" | 8,833,468
| style="text-align:right" | 25.8
| {{composition bar|119|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| rowspan="2" | [[Ernesto Zedillo]]
| rowspan="2" | [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[1997 Mexican legislative election|1997]]
| style="text-align:right" | 7,696,197
| style="text-align:right" | 25.9
| style="text-align:right" | 7,792,290
| style="text-align:right" | 25.9
| {{composition bar|121|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
|
|-
! [[2000 Mexican general election|2000]]
| style="text-align:right" | 14,212,032
| style="text-align:right" | 38.2
| style="text-align:right" | 14,321,975
| style="text-align:right" | 38.3
| {{composition bar|223|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#c3ffb7" | Minority
| rowspan="2" | [[Vicente Fox]]
| rowspan="2" | [[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg|23px]]
| Coalition: [[Alliance for Change (Mexico)|Alliance for Change]]
|-
! [[2003 Mexican legislative election|2003]]
| style="text-align:right" | 8,189,699
| style="text-align:right" | 30.7
| style="text-align:right" | 8,219,649
| style="text-align:right" | 30.7
| {{composition bar|151|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#c3ffb7" | Minority
|
|-
! [[2006 Mexican general election|2006]]
| style="text-align:right" | 13,753,633
| style="text-align:right" | 33.4
| style="text-align:right" | 13,845,121
| style="text-align:right" | 33.4
| {{composition bar|206|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#c3ffb7" | Minority
| rowspan="2" | [[Felipe Calderón]]
| rowspan="2" | [[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[2009 Mexican legislative election|2009]]
| style="text-align:right" | 9,679,435
| style="text-align:right" | 28.0
| style="text-align:right" | 9,714,181
| style="text-align:right" | 28.0
| {{composition bar|143|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#c3ffb7" | Minority
|
|-
! [[2012 Mexican general election|2012]]
| style="text-align:right" | 12,895,902
| style="text-align:right" | 25.9
| style="text-align:right" | 12,971,363
| style="text-align:right" | 25.9
| {{composition bar|114|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| rowspan="2" | [[Enrique Peña Nieto]]
| rowspan="2" | [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[2015 Mexican legislative election|2015]]
| style="text-align:right" | 8,346,846
| style="text-align:right" | 22.06
| style="text-align:right" | 8,379,270
| style="text-align:right" | 22.06
| {{composition bar|108|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
|
|-
! [[2018 Mexican general election|2018]]
| style="text-align:right" | 697,595
| style="text-align:right" | 1.25
| style="text-align:right" | 10,096,588
| style="text-align:right" | 17.93
| {{composition bar|83|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| rowspan="2" | [[Andrés Manuel López Obrador]]
| rowspan="2" | [[File:Morena_Party_(Mexico).svg|23px]]
| Coalition: For Mexico to the Front
|-
![[2021 Mexican legislative election|2021]]
| style="text-align:right" | 3,828,228
| style="text-align:right" | 7.83
| style="text-align:right" | 8,969,288
| style="text-align:right" | 18.25
| {{composition bar|111|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| Coalition: [[Va por México]]
|-
![[2024 Mexican general election|2024]]
| style="text-align:right" | 372,670
| style="text-align:right" | 0.66
| style="text-align:right" | 10,049,375
| style="text-align:right" | 17.55
| {{composition bar|72|500|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Claudia Sheinbaum]]
| [[File:Morena_Party_(Mexico).svg|23px]]
| Coalition: ''[[Fuerza y Corazón por México]]''
|}
|}


== References ==
====Senate elections====
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! rowspan="2"| Election
! colspan="2"| Constituency
! colspan="2"| PR
! rowspan="2"| # of seats
! rowspan="2"| Position
! colspan="2" rowspan="2"|Presidency
! rowspan="2"| Note
|-
! votes
! %
! votes
! %
|-
! [[1994 Mexican general election|1994]]
| colspan="2" style="background:#ccc;"|
| style="text-align:right" | 8,805,038
| style="text-align:right" | 25.7
| {{composition bar|25|128|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| rowspan="2" | [[Ernesto Zedillo]] || rowspan="2" | [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[1997 Mexican legislative election|1997]]
| colspan="2" style="background:#ccc;"|
| style="text-align:right" | 7,880,966
| style="text-align:right" | 26.1
| {{composition bar|33|128|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
|
|-
! [[2000 Mexican general election|2000]]
| style="text-align:right" | 14,208,973
| style="text-align:right" | 38.1
| style="text-align:right" | 14,339,963
| style="text-align:right" | 38.2
| {{composition bar|60|128|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#c3ffb7" | Minority
| [[Vicente Fox]]
| [[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg|23px]]
| Coalition: [[Alliance for Change (Mexico)|Alliance for Change]]
|-
! [[2006 Mexican general election|2006]]
| style="text-align:right" | 13,889,159
| style="text-align:right" | 33.5
| style="text-align:right" | 14,035,503
| style="text-align:right" | 33.6
| {{composition bar|52|128|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#c3ffb7" | Minority
| [[Felipe Calderón]]
| [[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[2012 Mexican general election|2012]]
| style="text-align:right" | 13,126,478
| style="text-align:right" | 26.3
| style="text-align:right" | 13,245,088
| style="text-align:right" | 26.3
| {{composition bar|38|128|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Enrique Peña Nieto]]
| [[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg|23px]]
|
|-
! [[2018 Mexican general election|2018]]
| style="text-align:right" | 600,423
| style="text-align:right" | 1.07
| style="text-align:right" | 9,971,804
| style="text-align:right" | 17.59
| {{composition bar|23|128|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Andrés Manuel López Obrador]]
| [[File:Morena_Party_(Mexico).svg|23px]]
| Coalition: For Mexico to the Front
|-
! [[2024 Mexican general election|2024]]
| style="text-align:right" | 1,148,920
| style="text-align:right" | 2.01
| style="text-align:right" | 10,107,537
| style="text-align:right" | 17.54
| {{composition bar|22|128|{{party color|National Action Party (Mexico)}}}}
| bgcolor="#ffe3e3" | Minority
| [[Claudia Sheinbaum]]
| [[File:Morena_Party_(Mexico).svg|23px]]
| Coalition: ''[[Fuerza y Corazón por México]]''
|}


==Bibliography==
{{reflist|2}}
*Chand, Vikram K. ''Mexico's Political Awakening'', Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press 2001.
*Espinosa, David. ''Jesuit Student Groups, the Universidad Iberoamericana, and Political Resistance in Mexico.'' Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 2014.
*[[Soledad Loaeza|Loaeza, Soledad]]. ''El Partido de Acción Nacional: La larga marcha, 1939–1994: Oposición leal y partido de protesta.'' Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económico 1999.
*Loaeza, Soledad. "Partido de Acción Nacional." In ''Encyclopedia of Mexico'', vol. 2, pp.&nbsp;1048–1052. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997.
*Mabry, Donald J. ''Mexico's Acción Nacional: A Catholic Alternative to Revolution''. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press 1973.
*Nuncio, Abraham. ''El PAN: Alternativa de poder o instrumento de la oligarquía empresarial.'' Mexico: Editorial Nuevo Imagen 1986.
*Shirk, David A. "Mexico's New Politics: The PAN and Democratic Change" Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers 2005.
*Von Sauer, Franz A. ''The Alienated "Loyal" Opposition: Mexico's Partido de Acción Nacional.'' Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1974.
*Ward, Peter. "Policy Making and Policy Implementation among Non-PRI Government: The PAN in Ciudad Juárez and in Chihuahua." In Victoria E. Rodríguez and Peter M. Ward, ''Opposition Government in Mexico'' pp.&nbsp;135–52. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1995.


== External links ==
==See also==
*[[National Action Party Jalisco]]
*[[History of democracy in Mexico]]
*[[List of political parties in Mexico]]


== Notes ==
* {{es icon}} [http://www.pan.org.mx/ Official website of the National Action Party]
{{Reflist|group=n}}


==References==
{{reflist}}


==External links==
{{Mexican political parties}}
{{commons category|National Action Party}}
*{{in lang|es}} [http://www.pan.org.mx/ Official website of the National Action Party]
{{Mexican political parties}}{{Authority control}}


[[Category:National Action Party (Mexico)| ]]
[[Category:Political parties in Mexico]]
[[Category:Political parties in Mexico]]
[[Category:National Action Party (Mexico)]]
[[Category:Right-wing parties in Mexico]]
[[Category:Political parties established in 1939]]
[[Category:1939 establishments in Mexico]]

Latest revision as of 20:56, 14 December 2024

National Action Party
Partido Acción Nacional
PresidentJorge Romero Herrera [es]
Secretary-GeneralMichel González Márquez [es]
Senate leaderGuadalupe Murguía Gutiérrez
Chamber leaderNoemí Luna Ayala [es]
FounderManuel Gómez Morín
... and others[n 1]
Founded16 September 1939; 85 years ago (1939-09-16)
HeadquartersAv. Coyoacán No. 1546 Col. Del Valle, Benito Juárez, Mexico City
NewspaperLa Nación
Youth wingAcción Juvenil
MembershipIncrease 277,665 (2023 est.)[2]
IdeologyConservatism[3]
Christian democracy[4]
Political positionCentre-right[5] to right-wing[6]
ReligionRoman Catholicism[7]
Electoral allianceFuerza y Corazón por México
International affiliationCentrist Democrat International
ODCA (Regional)
Colours  Blue   White
Anthem
"Himno de Acción Nacional"[8]
(lit.'Anthem of National Action')
Chamber of Deputies
71 / 500
Senate
22 / 128
Governorships
4 / 32
State legislatures
214 / 1,113
Mayors
312 / 2,043
Website
pan.org.mx

The National Action Party (Spanish: Partido Acción Nacional, PAN) is a conservative political party in Mexico founded in 1939. It is one of the main political parties in the country, and since the 1980s has had success winning local, state, and national elections.

In the historic 2000 Mexican general election, PAN candidate Vicente Fox was elected president, the first time in 71 years that the Mexican presidency was not held by the traditional ruling party, the PRI. Six years later, PAN candidate Felipe Calderón succeeded Fox following victory in the 2006 presidential election. In 2000–2012, PAN was the strongest party in both houses of the Congress of the Union (the federal legislature) but lacked a majority in either house. In the 2006 legislative elections, the party won 207 out of 500 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 52 out of 128 Senators. In the 2012 legislative elections, PAN won 38 seats in the Senate and 114 seats in the Chamber of Deputies,[9] but the party did not win the presidential election in 2012 or 2018. The members of this party are colloquially called Panistas.

Notoriously, the two presidents of the Republic elected as PAN candidates (Vicente Fox and Felipe Calderón) have both left the party. Fox supported Institutional Revolutionary Party presidential candidates in 2012 and 2018, while Calderón founded his own party named "México Libre".

History

[edit]

20th century

[edit]

Founding

[edit]
Manuel Gómez Morín, founder of the PAN in 1939

The National Action Party was founded in 1939 by Manuel Gómez Morín, who had held a number of important government posts in the 1920s and 1930s. He saw the need for the creation of a permanent political party rather than an ephemeral organization to oppose the expansion of power by the post-revolutionary Mexican state.[10][11] When Gómez Morín was rector of UNAM between 1933 and 1935, the government attempted to impose socialist education. In defending academic freedom, Gómez Morín forged connections with individuals and groups that later came together in the foundation of the PAN in September 1939. The Jesuit student organization, Unión Nacional de Estudiantes Católicos (UNEC), provided a well-organized network of adherents who successfully fought the imposition of a particular ideological view by the state. Gómez Morín was not himself a militant Catholic, but he was a devout believer who rejected liberalism and individualism.[12] In 1939, Gómez Morín and a significant number of UNEC's leadership came together to found the PAN. The PAN's first executive committee and committees on political action and doctrine also had former Catholic student activists, including Luis Calderón Vega, the father of Felipe Calderón, who became President of Mexico in 2006.[13] The PAN's "Doctrine of National Action" was strongly influenced by Catholic social doctrine articulated in Rerum novarum (1891) and Quadragesimo anno (1931) and rejected Marxist models of class warfare.[14] The PAN's newspaper, La Nación was founded by another former UNEC member, Carlos Séptien García.[14]

The PAN originally brought together the Mexican socio-economic elite opposed to President Lázaro Cárdenas' reforms. In particular, it opposed his plan for free secular education, the nationalization of oil and land reform. The party, which at the time included personalities sympathetic to fascism, campaigned for Mexico's neutrality during the Second World War.[15]

Efraín González Luna, a former member of the Mexican Catholic Student Union (Unión Nacional de Estudiantes Católicos) (UNEC), a long-time militant Catholic and practicing lawyer from Guadalajara, helped broker the party's informal alliance with the Catholic Church. However, the relationship between the PAN and the Catholic Church was not without tension. The party's founder Gómez Morín was leery of clerical oversight of the party, although its members were mainly urban Catholic professionals and businessmen. For its part, the Church hierarchy did not want to identify itself with a particular political party, since the Constitution of 1917 forbade it. In the 1950s, the PAN, which had been seen to be Catholic in its makeup, became more ideologically secular.[14]

Electoral results

[edit]

The PAN initially was a party of "civic example", an independent loyal opposition that generally did not win elections at any level. However, in the 1980s it began a transformation to a political power, beginning at the local and state levels in the North of Mexico.[16] A split in the PAN occurred in 1977, with the pro-Catholic faction and the more secular wing splitting. The PAN had updated its positions following the Second Vatican Council, toward a greater affinity for the poor; however, more traditional Catholics were critical of that stance and nonreligious groups were also in opposition, since they wanted the party to be less explicitly Catholic and draw in more urban professionals and business groups, who would vote for a nonreligious opposition party. The conflict came to a head, and in 1977 the progressive Catholic wing left the party.[17]

The PAN had strength in Northern Mexico and its candidates had won elections earlier on, but these victories were small in comparison to those of the Institutional Revolutionary Party. In 1946, PAN members Miguel Ramírez Munguía (Tacámbaro, Michoacán), Juan Gutiérrez Lascurain (Federal District), Antonio L. Rodríguez (Nuevo León) and Aquiles Elorduy García (Aguascalientes) became the first four federal deputies from the opposition in post-revolutionary Mexico.[citation needed] The following year, Manuel Torres Serranía from Quiroga, Michoacán became the party's first municipal president and Alfonso Hernández Sánchez (from Zamora, Michoacán) its first state deputy.[18] In 1962, Rosario Alcalá (Aguascalientes) became the first female candidate for state governor and two years later Florentina Villalobos Chaparro (Parral, Chihuahua) became the first female federal deputy.[citation needed] In 1967, Norma Villarreal de Zambrano (San Pedro Garza García, Nuevo León) became the first female municipal president.[citation needed]

Acción Juvenil official logo

Until the 1980s, the PAN was a weak opposition party that was considered pro-Catholic and pro-business, but never garnered many votes. Its strength, however, was that it was pro-democracy and pro-rule of law, so that its political profile was in contrast to the dominant Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) that was widely and increasingly seen as corrupt. The PAN came to be viewed as viable opposition party for a wider range of voters as it became more secular and as Mexicans increasingly moved to cities. As the PAN increasingly called for end of fraud in Mexican elections, it appealed to a wider range of people.[citation needed]

In 1988, the newly created Assembly of Representatives of the Federal District had, for the first time, members of the PAN. In 1989, Ernesto Ruffo Appel (Baja California) became the first opposition governor.[citation needed] Two years later, his future successor in the Baja California government, Héctor Terán Terán, became the first federal senator from the PAN.[citation needed] From 1992 to 2000, PAN candidates won the elections for governorships in Guanajuato, Chihuahua, Jalisco, Querétaro, Nuevo León, Aguascalientes, Yucatán and Morelos.[18]

21st century

[edit]

Electoral victory for the presidency, 2000

[edit]
Vicente Fox, first PANista to be elected president of Mexico (2000–06), ended more than 70 years of PRI rule.

In the 2000 presidential elections, the candidate of the Alianza por el Cambio ("Alliance for Change"), formed by the PAN and the Ecologist Green Party of Mexico (PVEM), Vicente Fox Quesada won 42.5% of the popular vote and was elected president of Mexico. Fox was the first opposition candidate to defeat the candidate of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and its precursors after 71 years. It was a significant victory not only for the PAN, but Mexican democracy.

In the senate elections of the same date, the Alliance won 46 out of 128 seats in the Senate. The Alliance broke off the following year and the PVEM has since participated together with the PRI in most elections.

Felipe Calderón, President of Mexico (2006–12)
  
States governed by the PAN (2024)

In the 2003 mid-term elections, the party won 30.74% of the popular vote and 153 out of 500 seats in the Chamber of Deputies. In 2003, the PAN lost the governorship of Nuevo León to the PRI and, the following year, failed to win back the state of Chihuahua from the PRI. Coupled with a bitterly fought election in Colima that was cancelled and later re-run, these developments were interpreted by some political analysts to be a significant rejection of the PAN in advance of the 2006 presidential election. In contrast, 2004 did see the PAN win for the first time in Tlaxcala, in a state that would not normally be considered PAN territory, although its candidate was a member of the PRI until a few months before the elections. It also managed to hold on to Querétaro (by a mere 3% margin against the PRI) and Aguascalientes (although in 2007, it lost most of the municipalities and the local Congress to the PRI). However, in 2005 the PAN lost the elections for the state government of Mexico State and Nayarit to the PRI. The former was considered one of the most important elections in the country because of the number of voters involved, which is higher than the elections for head of government of the Federal District. (See: 2003 Mexican elections, 2004 Mexican elections and 2005 Mexican elections for results.)

Significantly in the 2006 presidential election in 2006, the PAN candidate Felipe Calderón was elected to succeed Vicente Fox. Calderón was the son of one of the founders of the PAN, and was himself a former party president. He was selected as the PAN's candidate, after beating his opponents Santiago Creel (Secretary of the Interior during Fox's term) and Alberto Cárdenas (former governor of Jalisco) in every voting round in the party primaries. On 2 July 2006, Felipe Calderón secured a plurality of the votes cast. Finishing less than one percent behind was Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who challenged the results of the election on possible grounds of electoral fraud. In addition to the presidency, the PAN won 206 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 52 in the Senate, securing it the largest single party blocs in both houses.

In 2007, the PAN lost the governorship and the majority in the state congress of Yucatán to the PRI as well as the municipal presidency of Aguascalientes, but kept both the governorship and the majority in the state congress of Baja California. The PRI also obtained more municipal presidents and local congresspeople in Chihuahua, Durango, Zacatecas, Aguascalientes, Chiapas and Oaxaca. The PRD obtained more posts than the PAN in Zacatecas, Chiapas and Oaxaca.

In 2009, the PAN held 33 seats in the Senate and 142 seats in the Chamber of deputies.[9]

Return of the PRI to presidency

[edit]

In 2012, the PAN lost the Presidential Election to Enrique Peña Nieto of the PRI. They also won 38 seats in the Senate (a gain of 3 seats), and 114 seats in the Chamber of Deputies (a loss of 28 seats).[9] The government of president of Mexico Enrique Peña Nieto (EPN) has faced multiple scandals, and allegations of corruption. Reforma who has run surveys of presidential approval since 1995, revealed EPN had received a mere 12% approval rating, the lowest since they started to survey for presidential approval.[19]

Ideology

[edit]
Diego Fernandez de Cevallos

The PAN has been linked to a conservative stance in Mexican politics since its inception, but the party does not consider itself a fundamentally conservative party. The party ideology, at least in principle, is that of "National Action" which rejects a fundamental adherence to left- or right-wing politics or policies, instead requiring the adoption of such policies as correspond to the problems faced by the nation at any given moment. Thus both right- and left-wing policies may be considered equally carefully in formulation of national policy.[20]

This theory of National Action politics, rejecting a fundamental adherence to right or left, is held within a strongly Christian context, and falls under the umbrella of Christian democracy.[20]

The party theory was largely developed by early figures such as Gómez Morín and his associates. However, some observers consider the PAN claim to National Action politics to be weakened by the apparent persistent predominance of conservatism in PAN policy in practice. The PAN has similarities with Europe and Latin America's Christian democratic parties.[20]

Economic policies

[edit]

The PAN currently occupies the right of Mexico's political spectrum, advocating free enterprise, pragmatism, small government, privatization and libertarian reforms as well. The PAN is a member of the Christian Democrat Organization of America. In general, PAN claims to support free enterprise and thus free trade agreements.[citation needed]

Social policies

[edit]

Abortion

[edit]
Luis Felipe Bravo

Carlos Abascal, secretary of the interior in the latter part of the Fox administration, called emergency contraception a "weapon of mass destruction" in July 2005.[21] It was during Fox's term, however, that the "morning-after" pill was legalized, even though the Church had condemned the use of these kind of pills, calling them "abortion pills".

The PAN produced a television spot against state-financed abortion, one that features popular comedian Chespirito (who was also featured on a TV spot promoting Vicente Fox in the 2000 presidential elections) and a second one that accuses the PRI and PRD of wanting to kill the unborn.[22] After the abortion bill, which made abortion available, anonymous, and free or government-paid, was approved at the local legislature, the PAN requested the Human Rights Commission of the Federal District (CDHDF) to enact actions on the unconstitutionality of the measure, the CDHDF rejected the request as it found no basis of unconstitutionality.[23] After unsuccessfully appealing to unconstitutionality, the PAN declared that it may request the remotion of Emilio Álvarez Icaza, the president of the Human Rights Commission of the Federal District, for his lack of moral quality.[24] The PAN, with the members of the Association of Catholic Lawyers, gathered signatures and turned them in to the Federal District Electoral Institute (IEDF) to void the abortion bill and force a referendum,[25] which was also rejected by the IEDF. In May 2007, the PAN started a campaign to encourage rejections to perform abortion among doctors in the Federal District based on conscience.[26]

Opposition to same-sex unions in Mexico

[edit]

The PAN has opposed measures to establish civil unions in Mexico City and Coahuila. On 9 November 2006, the government of the Federal District approved the first law establishing civil unions in Mexico. The members of the PAN, and a member of New Alliance were the only legislators that voted against it.[27]

The same year, the local legislature of Coahuila approved the law of civil unions to which the PAN also opposed.[28] The PAN also lodged an unconstitutionality plea before the Supreme Court of Justice of the State of Coahuila, alleging that the constitution has vowed to protect the institution of the family.[29]

Guillermo Bustamente Manilla, a member of the PAN and the president of the National Parents Union (UNPF) is the father of Guillermo Bustamante Artasánchez, a law director of the Secretary of the Interior, Carlos Abascal, during Fox's presidency and worked in the Calderón administration against abortion and same-sex civil unions.[30] He called the latter as "anti-natural."[31] He has publicly asked voters not to cast votes for "abortionist" parties and those who are in favor of homosexual relationships.[32]

Party presidents

[edit]

1.- Resigned to run for president

Election results

[edit]

Presidential elections

[edit]
Election Candidate # votes % vote Result Note
1952 Efraín González Luna 285,555 7.8 Red XN Defeated
1958 Luis H. Álvarez 705,303 9.4 Red XN Defeated
1964 José González Torres 1,034,337 11.0 Red XN Defeated
1970 Efraín González Morfín 1,945,070 14.0 Red XN Defeated
1976 No Candidate Red XN Did not run
1982 Pablo Emilio Madero 3,700,045 16.4 Red XN Defeated
1988 Manuel Clouthier 3,208,584 16.8 Red XN Defeated
1994 Diego Fernández de Cevallos 9,146,841 25.9 Red XN Defeated
2000 Vicente Fox 15,989,636 42.5 Green tickY Elected Coalition: Alianza por el Cambio
2006 Felipe Calderón 15,000,284 35.8 Green tickY Elected
2012 Josefina Vázquez Mota 12,786,647 25.4 Red XN Defeated
2018 Ricardo Anaya 12,609,472 22.3 Red XN Defeated Coalition: Por México al Frente
2024 Xóchitl Gálvez 16,502,697 28.11 Red XN Defeated Coalition: Fuerza y Corazón por México

Congressional elections

[edit]

Note: Only elections where the party won seats are listed.

Chamber of Deputies

[edit]
Election Constituency PR # of seats Position Presidency Note
votes % votes %
1946 51,312 2.2
4 / 147
Minority Miguel Alemán Valdés
1952 301,986 8.3
5 / 161
Minority Adolfo Ruiz Cortines
1958 749,519 10.2
6 / 162
Minority Adolfo López Mateos
1964 1,042,396 11.5
20 / 210
Minority Gustavo Díaz Ordaz
1970 1,893,289 14.2
20 / 213
Minority Luis Echeverría Álvarez
1976 1,358,403 9.0
20 / 237
Minority José López Portillo
1982 3,663,846 17.5
51 / 400
Minority Miguel de la Madrid
1988 3,276,824 18.0
101 / 500
Minority Carlos Salinas de Gortari
1994 8,664,834 25.8 8,833,468 25.8
119 / 500
Minority Ernesto Zedillo
1997 7,696,197 25.9 7,792,290 25.9
121 / 500
Minority
2000 14,212,032 38.2 14,321,975 38.3
223 / 500
Minority Vicente Fox Coalition: Alliance for Change
2003 8,189,699 30.7 8,219,649 30.7
151 / 500
Minority
2006 13,753,633 33.4 13,845,121 33.4
206 / 500
Minority Felipe Calderón
2009 9,679,435 28.0 9,714,181 28.0
143 / 500
Minority
2012 12,895,902 25.9 12,971,363 25.9
114 / 500
Minority Enrique Peña Nieto
2015 8,346,846 22.06 8,379,270 22.06
108 / 500
Minority
2018 697,595 1.25 10,096,588 17.93
83 / 500
Minority Andrés Manuel López Obrador Coalition: For Mexico to the Front
2021 3,828,228 7.83 8,969,288 18.25
111 / 500
Minority Coalition: Va por México
2024 372,670 0.66 10,049,375 17.55
72 / 500
Minority Claudia Sheinbaum Coalition: Fuerza y Corazón por México

Senate elections

[edit]
Election Constituency PR # of seats Position Presidency Note
votes % votes %
1994 8,805,038 25.7
25 / 128
Minority Ernesto Zedillo
1997 7,880,966 26.1
33 / 128
Minority
2000 14,208,973 38.1 14,339,963 38.2
60 / 128
Minority Vicente Fox Coalition: Alliance for Change
2006 13,889,159 33.5 14,035,503 33.6
52 / 128
Minority Felipe Calderón
2012 13,126,478 26.3 13,245,088 26.3
38 / 128
Minority Enrique Peña Nieto
2018 600,423 1.07 9,971,804 17.59
23 / 128
Minority Andrés Manuel López Obrador Coalition: For Mexico to the Front
2024 1,148,920 2.01 10,107,537 17.54
22 / 128
Minority Claudia Sheinbaum Coalition: Fuerza y Corazón por México

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Chand, Vikram K. Mexico's Political Awakening, Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press 2001.
  • Espinosa, David. Jesuit Student Groups, the Universidad Iberoamericana, and Political Resistance in Mexico. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 2014.
  • Loaeza, Soledad. El Partido de Acción Nacional: La larga marcha, 1939–1994: Oposición leal y partido de protesta. Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económico 1999.
  • Loaeza, Soledad. "Partido de Acción Nacional." In Encyclopedia of Mexico, vol. 2, pp. 1048–1052. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997.
  • Mabry, Donald J. Mexico's Acción Nacional: A Catholic Alternative to Revolution. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press 1973.
  • Nuncio, Abraham. El PAN: Alternativa de poder o instrumento de la oligarquía empresarial. Mexico: Editorial Nuevo Imagen 1986.
  • Shirk, David A. "Mexico's New Politics: The PAN and Democratic Change" Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers 2005.
  • Von Sauer, Franz A. The Alienated "Loyal" Opposition: Mexico's Partido de Acción Nacional. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1974.
  • Ward, Peter. "Policy Making and Policy Implementation among Non-PRI Government: The PAN in Ciudad Juárez and in Chihuahua." In Victoria E. Rodríguez and Peter M. Ward, Opposition Government in Mexico pp. 135–52. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1995.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Gómez Morín founded the National Action Party of Mexico along with Roberto Cossío y Cosío, Juan Landerreche Obregón, Daniel Kuri Breña, Juan José Páramo Castro, Bernardo Ponce, Francisco Fernández Cueto, Carlos Ramírez Zetina and Enrique Manuel Loaeza Garay.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "PAN – Partido Acción Nacional". N+ (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 2 November 2023.
  2. ^ "Padrón de afiliados".
  3. ^
  4. ^ Loaeza, Soledad (2003). "The Nationalist Action Party (PAN): From the Fringes of the Political System to the Heart of Change". In Mainwaring, Scott; Scully, Timothy R. (eds.). Christian Democracy in Latin America: Electoral Competition and Regime Conflicts. Stanford University Press. p. 196. ISBN 0-8047-4598-6.
  5. ^
  6. ^
  7. ^ Loaeza, Soledad (2003). "The National Action Party (PAN): From the Fringes of the Political System to the Heart of Change". In Mainwaring, Scott; Scully, Timothy R. (eds.). Christian Democracy in Latin America: Electoral Competition and Regime Conflicts. Stanford University Press. p. 196. ISBN 0-8047-4598-6.
  8. ^ Morales, Antonio Lugo (8 March 2012). Los Partidos Políticos En México Y La Sucesión Presidencial Del Año 2012. Palibrio. p. 91. ISBN 978-1463322823. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  9. ^ a b c Seelke, Claire. "Mexico's 2012 Elections" (PDF). Congressional Research Service.
  10. ^ Soledad Loaeza, "Partido de Acción Nacional (PAN)" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, vol. 2, p. 1048. Chicago: Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997.
  11. ^ Vikram K. Chand, Mexico’s Political Awakening. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press 2001.
  12. ^ Loaeza, "Partido de Acción Nacional", p. 1049.
  13. ^ Espinosa, Jesuit Student Groups, p. 73
  14. ^ a b c Espinosa, Jesuit Student Groups, p. 73.
  15. ^ Manzano, Alejandro (17 February 2021). "El legado de la derecha en Chihuahua". Jacobin Revista (in Spanish).
  16. ^ Vikram K. Chand, Mexico's Political Awakening, see especially chapter 3 "The Transformation of Mexico’s National Action Party (PAN): From Civic Example to Political Power."
  17. ^ Loaeza, "Partido de Acción Nacional", p. 1051.
  18. ^ a b History of the PAN. PAN official website.
  19. ^ "Why Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto is so unpopular". NBC News. 31 August 2016.
  20. ^ a b c Partido Acción Nacional—los signos de la institucionalización (in Spanish). UNAM. 2002. ISBN 978-970-637-123-2.
  21. ^ "PALABRAS DEL SECRETARIO DE GOBERNACIÓN, CARLOS ABASCAL CARRANZA, DURANTE EL DESAYUNO CON DIRECTIVOS DEL CENTRO DE REHABILITACIÓN INTEGRAL TELETON (CRIT) TLALNEPANTLA Y DIRECTIVOS DE LOS MEDIOS DE COMUNICACIÓN" (in Spanish). Secretaría de Gobernación. 19 July 2005. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
  22. ^ "Difunde PAN spot Vs. aborto en Internet". Frontera (in Spanish). 26 April 2007. Archived from the original on 20 January 2008.
  23. ^ "Improcedente, acción de inconstitucionalidad contra aborto: CDHDF". La Crónica (in Spanish). 11 May 2007.
  24. ^ "El PAN-DF, molesto porque Álvarez Icaza apoyó la despenalización, ahora pide la cabeza del ombudsman". La Crónica (in Spanish). 5 May 2007.
  25. ^ "Invalida IEDF solicitud de referendum sobre el aborto". El Sol de México (in Spanish). 7 May 2007. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.
  26. ^ "Inicia PAN-DF campaña contra el aborto en hospitals". La Jornada (in Spanish). 8 May 2007. Archived from the original on 17 December 2007.
  27. ^ "Aprueban la Ley de Sociedades de Convivencia". El Universal (in Spanish). 10 November 2006.
  28. ^ "New law propels gay rights in Mexico – (Coahuila moves boldly with civil unions as nation watches)". Free Republic. 5 March 2007.
  29. ^ "Legisladores mexicanos presentan recurso ante la Suprema Corte de Justicia contra la ley de uniones civiles". Hispavista (in Spanish). 11 February 2007. Archived from the original on 13 November 2007.
  30. ^ "Calderón, cómplice del clero". Proceso (in Spanish). 24 April 2007.
  31. ^ "Mexico City's law on civil unions draws mixed reaction". Noticias de Oaxaca. 16 March 2007. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.
  32. ^ "Padres de familia mexicanos piden no votar por partidos abortistas". ACI Prensa (in Spanish). 30 April 2007.
  33. ^ "Biography of Adolfo Christlieb Ibarrola". Memoria Política de México.
[edit]