By Wayne A. Cornelius
The near-unanimous vote last week by the Mexican Congress to allow immigrants
in the United States to vote in presidential elections is a major step toward
consolidating Mexico's democracy — and Americans should celebrate it. Through
the power of absentee ballots, Mexicans who live here may be able to change the
policies that drove many of them to seek work in the
The population of Mexico-born people in the
But the reform could have been more inclusive. Of the Mexicans living abroad,
only registered voters who request mail ballots will be able to vote. There
isn't enough time before next year's presidential election to set up a
fraud-proof system that would allow voting in person at booths in Mexican
consulates in the
So don't expect a tidal wave of expatriate votes to overwhelm
Mexican electoral authorities predict about 400,000 absentee ballots — 10% of
those eligible. If turnout is significantly higher, and the number of expatriate
votes exceeds the winning candidate's margin of victory, the losing parties can
challenge the outcome in court on grounds that the new law violates the
constitutional guarantee of a secret ballot. There is really no way to
guarantee the secrecy of a mailed ballot. But the parties that brought such a
challenge would pay a high political cost in the long run.
Congress approved the change because no political party — especially the
Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI — wanted to be blamed for failing to
enfranchise the 14% of the Mexican electorate that lives abroad. Fear of voter
retribution outweighed any concern that one party or another would benefit
disproportionately from expatriate balloting.
The challenge will be to fine-tune and expand next year's limited experiment in
absentee voting. Many issues remain to be addressed — registering those who
lack credentials, lifting legal restrictions on political campaigning abroad,
paying for a costlier system of in-person voting.
But Mexican political leaders should be able to resolve these problems. And
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Wayne A. Cornelius is the Gildred
professor of U.S.-Mexican relations and the director of the Center for
Comparative Immigration Studies at UC