From The
Guardian's investigative report about Televisa's concerted effort to take down
Lopez-Obrador's 2006 campaign and boost Pena-Nieto and the PRI to victory in
2012:
"One of the
documents is a PowerPoint presentation which explicitly states its aim of
making sure "López Obrador does not win the 2006 elections". That
bitterly contested election saw the leftwing candidate lose a commanding lead
and ended with him claiming he had been cheated.
It was
apparently created just after midnight on 4 April 2005, hours before President
Fox was reported to have met the heads of Televisa and TV Azteca.
Fox was
facing growing criticism for an attempt to get Lopez Obrador, then mayor of
Mexico City, impeached over a minor planning dispute. The document outlines
short-term measures for controlling the backlash, a period of national mourning
for the recently-deceased Pope John Paul II to distract attention from the
growing row. The next day Fox declared a day of mourning for the pontiff.
Longer-term
strategies proposed to "dismantle the public perception that Lopez Obrador
is a martyr/saviour," by boosting news coverage of crime in the capital
and revisiting old corruption cases involving his former allies. The plan also
envisaged "promoting personal stories of crimes suffered [in the capital]
by showbiz celebrities" and "urging the inhabitants of the Big
Brother house" to do the same. Some Televisa celebrities did just that,
both on showbiz programmes and in the Mexican version of Celebrity Big Brother
broadcast that May.
The document
also advises that scriptwriters of a popular political weekly satire show called
El Privilegio de Mandar should make the character who represented López Obrador
appear "clumsy" and "inept." The final episode of the show,
broadcast immediately after the 2006 elections – when the result of a recount
was still pending – ended with a non-humorous speech by an actor calling on
López Obrador to accept defeat."
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