Mexicos Democratic Facade

Running Head: MEXICO’S DEMOCRATIC FACADE 1
Mexico’s Democratic Facade:
An Authoritarian Regime Under the Guise of a
Democracy
Gabriela I. Morales
El Camino Community College
MEXICO’S DEMOCRATIC FACADE
2
Since its independence from Spain in 1821, the nation of Mexico has become one of the
most highly developed countries in the world, and one of the few successful countries remaining
after declaring independence from a European country. By trying to follow the same route as the
United States, the people of Mexico decided to declare their independence from the Spanish
Empire, along with many other Latin American countries, and soon established a democratic
government system very similar to the US. Unlike the United States, the Mexican government
had struggled in keeping civil order within its borders but today the country has managed to unite
itself enough to be recognized by other nations as a powerhouse country. However, even though
Mexico was successful in elevating its international position to a world power, its regime’s
stability does not reflect the same. In an attempt to determine Mexico’s regime type, this paper
will be using the Democracy Index to examine its domestic politics. The Democracy Index was
created by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) to determine the strength of a given country
and its regime type. Designed as a dichotomous point-based scoring system, every indicator’s
score will either mainly be a yes (worth 1 point) or no (worth 0 points), with the occasional in
between options (worth 0.5 points). There are 60 indicators in total that are dispersed throughout
five separate categories. The first category Mexico’s electoral process and pluralism, followed by
Mexico’s functioning of government, its political participation, its democratic political culture,
and its civil liberties were each given an overall score based on the research and analysis
provided throughout this paper. After averaging all the individually scored categories to
determine Mexico’s overall index score, this paper will conclude that Mexico should be given a
Democracy Index score of 5.2 and can be classified as a Hybrid Regime.
MEXICO’S DEMOCRATIC FACADE
3
Mexico was determined as a Hybrid Regime by averaging all the category scores as a
collective. The first category that was a part of this collective had its 12 indicators focused on
Mexico’s electoral process and pluralism. After the indicators were calculated within the
category, it was determined that the category had earned an average, overall score of five.
Mexico earned such a low score in this category due to earning zeros and 0.5’s on many of its
indicators. Indicators that received a 0.5 were compromised and not given a full point
because
Mexico fails to insure a fair system of governance. A big problem in Mexico is the significant
corruption of government present within its system since the political party Partido
Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) began dominating all branches of government. As stated by
the 2015 textbook Cases In Comparative Politics: Fifth Edition,written by Patrick H. O’neil,
Karl Fields, and Don Share:
Following the U.S. model, Mexican states and localities have their own own police
forces, but these forces have been widely viewed as bastions of corruption. Since 2006,
local police have been replaced in some areas by federal forces to root out corruption.
The investigation surrounding the shocking disappearance of 43 university students at a
rural teacher’s college in September 2014 revealed the local government, the local
police, and drug traffickers had worked together to kidnap the students. (p. 580).
It can be argued that pluralism within Mexican legislature, rather than electoral competition
itself offers the appropriate elucidation for institutionalization. The procedure-tracing
examination of Mexico’s 31 states authenticates that pluralism in Mexican electorate fashion
legislative pluralism, and also indirectly affects the levels of pressures for institutionalization,
but demonstrates that the discrepancy in Mexican electoral laws also holds a vital function.
Mexico is ranked partly free in the indicator of political freedom, where it is ranked position 3
out of 7 in the political freedom ranking. The country has a multi-party structure. Under
changeover to democratic pluralism, the hub of political authority has moved from executive
towards the local governments and legislature. The leading 3 legislative forces in Mexico
include: National Action Party (PAN), Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), and
Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).

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