Packing Mexico City’s central square and surrounding streets, thousands of supporters of the leftist President-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador celebrated his landslide victory into the early hours of July 2. They waved banners, blew whistles and shouted “Pres-i-dente.” Some had tears in their eyes as they chanted and danced as confetti pumped out of machines. Others called out “Si se puede” (Yes we can), a chant also used for Mexico’s national soccer team when it wins games. The festivities had been a long time coming, the culmination of a 30-year struggle by the Mexican left to win the presidency. That struggle began all the way back in 1988, when the leftist candidate Cuauhtemoc Cardenas first ran for the top job and continued through two more of his attempts and López Obrador’s three presidential runs. When López Obrador finally spoke, the supporters raucously cheered, and returned his cries of “Viva Mexico.” But when screens showed the outgoing President Enrique Peña Nieto of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, many of the crowd booed hard. López Obrador’s success this time came after he built a large coalition, including more former PRI politicians, and allied with smaller political parties, including one with socially conservative views. López Obrador also gained the support of many younger voters looking for something different; he has promised scholarships for high school and university #students, as well as paid apprenticeships to stop young people getting into #crime. The celebrations of his election victory rivaled those that Mexico holds each year to mark its independence from Spain. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @christopher_vii—@viiphoto for TIME

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 7月3日 08時19分


Packing Mexico City’s central square and surrounding streets, thousands of supporters of the leftist President-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador celebrated his landslide victory into the early hours of July 2. They waved banners, blew whistles and shouted “Pres-i-dente.” Some had tears in their eyes as they chanted and danced as confetti pumped out of machines. Others called out “Si se puede” (Yes we can), a chant also used for Mexico’s national soccer team when it wins games. The festivities had been a long time coming, the culmination of a 30-year struggle by the Mexican left to win the presidency. That struggle began all the way back in 1988, when the leftist candidate Cuauhtemoc Cardenas first ran for the top job and continued through two more of his attempts and López Obrador’s three presidential runs. When López Obrador finally spoke, the supporters raucously cheered, and returned his cries of “Viva Mexico.” But when screens showed the outgoing President Enrique Peña Nieto of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, many of the crowd booed hard. López Obrador’s success this time came after he built a large coalition, including more former PRI politicians, and allied with smaller political parties, including one with socially conservative views. López Obrador also gained the support of many younger voters looking for something different; he has promised scholarships for high school and university #students, as well as paid apprenticeships to stop young people getting into #crime. The celebrations of his election victory rivaled those that Mexico holds each year to mark its independence from Spain. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @christopher_vii@viiphoto for TIME


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