7:02 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · mexico|Politics · Comments Off
5 Jul 2006
La vida te da sorpresas, sorpresas te da la vida, ay Dios
Oh, what a difference a day — and a recount — makes. Mexican and international press is reporting that the official recount has put PRD candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador in the lead over opponent Felipe Calderón, who had just a day ago seemed to be the victor in this race, full of all the twists and turns of a telenovela.
According to Spain’s El País, reporting a little over an hour ago:
The recount of the 42.79% of the votes from the Mexican presidential elections of last Sunday yields a 2.62% lead to leftist candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador, according to an announcement by the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE). IFE sources have also clarified that while this would put López Obrador at 37,00% and conservative Felipe Calderón at 34,38%, it is still not possible to confirm definite trends.
5:25 pm By Maegan La Mala · Environment|New York City · Comments Off
5 Jul 2006
New York City isn’t known for being quiet and peaceful. This is especially true for the uptown Manhattan neighborhood of Washington Heights-Inwood. According complaints logged by the 311 system, the city’s phone number for government information and non-emergency services, this heavily Dominican neighborhood is the noisiest ‘hood in the five boroughs. According to the New York Post:
…an astonishing 14,030 gripes about noise poured in July 1, 2005, to May 30, 2006, from residents in the Community Board 12 district, covering the blocks above 155th Street.
The reasons for the noise depend on who you ask. Some residents cite stereos, smoking, drinking, jumping, and crying while others cite airplane and helicopter noise.
Via / New York Post
10:12 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Labor|New York City · Comments Off
5 Jul 2006
NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg is no bobo. He knows how vital immigrants are to the success and survival of the five boroughs he watches over. That’s why today Bloomberg is headed to the City of Brotherly love aka Philadelphia to testify in favor of the guest worker program at a Senate Judiciary Committee. The guest worker (please don’t call it amnesty) program allows undocumented workers to stay in the U.S. working and includes a path to citizenship. According to NY1 Bloomberg said:
The truth of the matter is we need lots of immigrants to come into this country every year. Our birth rate is not high enough to sustain the growth in the economy that we need.
This comes as the mass media is reporting that President Bush may be backing down from his immigration reform plan and may be looking at beefing up the enforcement of immigration laws as priority.
Via / NY1
Image Via / AskMen.com
10:05 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|mexico|Politics · 1 Comment
5 Jul 2006
Famed Mexican author Elena Poniatowska set out on Sunday to vote just like every other Mexican citizen who felt the weight of their civic duty. Elena, like others, was an eyewitness to shocking irregularities at her local polling place, and wrote it up in an editorial called “Si se enojan los volcanes” in yesterday’s La Jornada newspaper. Given that this is the kind of reporting you won’t read about in U.S. mainstream media and that not all of our readers read Spanish, we’re translating the entire piece:
“Just before 8:00 a.m. on Sunday, July 2nd, Paula Haro, my daughter, and Lorenzo Hagerman, my son in-law, stood in line to vote on Avenida Revolución, at the Casa de la Cultura Jaime Sabines. Since Paula and Lorenzo don’t live in Mexico City but in Mérida they looked for a special polling place and I accompanied them before I went to my polling place in la colonia del Carmen. By 2:00 pm they (Paula and Lorenzo) still had not voted (because the polling place opened late and there were a lot of voters), as two police officers counted those who were waiting in line out in the sun and said “There are only 750 ballots so there aren’t enough.” In the line appeared a whole bunch of nuns (some about 80 years old) and none of them were denied voting, but at 2:30 p.m. the rest of the line had to give up their chance to vote (after waiting for several hours) because of the lack of ballots. While many went over to the entrance door to yell “We want to vote, we want to vote”, they had no other choice than to disperse.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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