
Police officers stand guard Friday during a demonstration outside the Federal Electoral Tribunal in Mexico City.
The unanimous ruling by the seven-judge panel clears the way for the return of Peña Nieto's party, known as the PRI, to power. It had lost the quasi-authoritarian grip on the country that it had enjoyed for more than seven decades in 2000, after numerous democratic reforms.
Though there were scattered protests throughout Mexico City, they have not yet risen to the levels of 2006 when, after an even closer election, Lopez Obrador's followers choked the city center for weeks, bringing the country to the brink of a constitutional crisis. Lopez Obrador - who has declared the latest elections neither "clean, free or authentic" - has called for a protest Sept. 9 in the Zocalo, the capital's historic square.
The president-elect arrived at the tribunal chambers late Friday to receive the judges' blessing. In a short speech, he urged Mexicans to unify despite their differences, and had words that, while not mentioning him by name, were obviously meant for his vanquished opponent:
"Legality is fundamental to our democratic system," Peña Nieto said.
"There are rules, deadlines and procedures," he said. "All of the competitors accept them, and we have an obligation to respect them."
The judges' decision was widely anticipated by observers here who had assumed that the tribunal would not deem the PRI's electoral sins sufficiently grave to warrant overturning an election that Peña Nieto won by nearly 3.2 million votes.













Comment: To learn about the origins of "suicide bombings", read this:
The British Empire - A Lesson In State Terrorism