The diplomatic impasse between Argentina and Spain intensifies

During the day of the presidential elections in Mexico, photographs of electoral ballots circulate on social networks that have gone viral on social networks due to the particular “candidate” who was voted for, the Argentine president Javier Milei.

In the image you can see the electoral ballot marked with the name of the Argentine president. The names of the three candidates in the electoral contest appear on the ballot, but in the last box, where any Mexican citizen without a party can vote, the name “Javier Milei” appears written.

The Argentine president reacted on social networks by sharing the image on his X account, formerly Twitter.

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In the middle of the election day in Mexico to define the next president, the photograph of a ballot has gone viral on social networks due to the particular “candidate” who was voted: the Argentine president Javier Milei. In the image you can see the electoral ballot to vote for the next president of Mexico, but in the last box, where the vote can be cast by any Mexican citizen without a party, “Javier Milei” appears written. In the middle of the electoral day in Mexico to define the next president or president, the photograph of a ballot has gone viral on social networks due to the particular “candidate” who was voted: the Argentine president Javier Milei. In the image you can see the electoral ballot to vote for the next president or president of Mexico, but in the last box, where any Mexican citizen without a party can vote, “Javier Milei” appears written.

The El Trumpista account shared on its social network X that some Mexicans voted for Milei due to the lack of right-wing candidates.

The three candidates are identified with leftist ideology.

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As soon as the Mexican who gave his vote to the Argentine did so, he identified himself as Jesús Chávez. The man wrote that it was the “first time I voted for someone who actually represents me for president.”

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Some Mexicans chose to vote for the more than 100,000 disappeared. The newspaper El Sol de México reported that for several days, groups of relatives invited people who were thinking about canceling or abstaining from voting to write the name of one or more of the 114,000 missing people in Mexico in the box for candidacies. not registered.

In some parts of Mexico there were people who chose to annul their vote by choosing one of the more than 100,000 disappeared people in the country as a presidential candidate in a sign of protest against the lack of results in the investigations.

“I voted for Yureny, for Pilar, for Carmen and all those many who have disappeared,” said Victoria Delgadillo, founder of the “Enlaces Xalapa” Collective and who is looking for her daughter Yureny Citlali Hernández, who disappeared in 2011 at the age of 26 along with others. 12 young people in the municipality of Actopan, in the state of Veracruz, in the east of the country.

The “Vote for the Disappeared” campaign, launched nationwide by relatives, was not intended to discourage participation but to make invalid votes have special meaning by recording the name of a missing person on a part of the ballots where the voter can write the name of an unregistered candidate.

Source: DLA EDITORIAL

Tarun Kumar

I'm Tarun Kumar, and I'm passionate about writing engaging content for businesses. I specialize in topics like news, showbiz, technology, travel, food and more.

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