Mexico Election 2024: Polling Tracker Sheinbaum Lead Widens to 29 Points in Presidential Race

(We have updated the tracker with more recent polling. Click here to see the latest.)

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Presidential frontrunner Claudia Sheinbaum is strengthening her advantage in the race to be Mexico’s next leader. Three new polls added to the Bloomberg Poll Tracker show her 28.6 points ahead of the main opposition rival, Xóchitl Gálvez.

Our team has just returned from the country’s most important banking conference in Acapulco, where top finance executives heard from all three candidates. While Gálvez got the most cheering, bankers are comfortable with Sheinbaum too — maybe a bit too comfortable, Bloomberg Opinion columnist Juan Pablo Spinetto writes.

Voters will get another chance to compare all three candidates in the second presidential debate this Sunday, April 28 with topics including inflation, unemployment, economic growth, infrastructure and inequality.

Bloomberg Poll Tracker

Effective vote intention, as of April 14, 2024

  1. Photo of Claudia Sheinbaum

    60%

    Claudia Sheinbaum

    Morena-PT-PVEM

  2. Photo of Xóchitl Gálvez

    32%

    Xóchitl Gálvez

    PAN-PRI-PRD

  3. Photo of Jorge Alvarez Maynez

    8%

    Jorge Álvarez Máynez

    MC

Note: Data for Movimiento Ciudadano party from November to Jan. 9 reflects support for previous nominee Samuel García Source: Bloomberg Poll Tracker

The Bloomberg Poll Tracker is a weighted poll of polls based on criteria including historical accuracy and survey methodology. Remember, our tracker excludes the effect of undecided voters and people who declined to answer the polls.

In Acapulco, Bloomberg News also got the opportunity to sit down with Sheinbaum for an exclusive interview. You can read highlights here and watch the whole video here.


Who Is Running to be Mexico's President?

Claudia Sheinbaum
Running for ruling party Morena on a platform of continuity with López Obrador’s popular legacy, this student activist-turned scientist-turned politician is leading the race for the presidency. Sheinbaum, 61, has a long career as a Mexico City official: She was first environmental secretary when López Obrador ran the capital early this century and later oversaw one of its big southern districts before becoming mayor herself in 2018.
Read More
Climate Expert Claudia Sheinbaum Aims to Lead Oil-Rich Mexico
In Sync With AMLO, Mexico Frontrunner Proposes Boosting Welfare

Claudia Sheinbaum speaks after the second presidential debate in Mexico City, on April 28.
Claudia Sheinbaum speaks after the second presidential debate in Mexico City, on April 28. Photographer: Carl de Souza/AFP/Getty Images

Xóchitl Gálvez
Tasked with leading a coalition of disparate political parties whose identities have fluctuated over time — from the more right-wing PAN, to the historically powerful PRI and the once left-leaning PRD — and that for many voters have lost their luster. Gálvez herself grew up in poverty and was a businesswoman before entering politics.
Read More
Mexico’s Maverick ‘Ms. X’ Embraces Pragmatism in Presidential Bid
Xochitl Galvez on Nearshoring, Insecurity, Donald Trump

Xóchitl Gálvez gestures during the second presidential debate at Estudios Churubusco in Mexico City on April 28.
Xóchitl Gálvez gestures during the second presidential debate at Estudios Churubusco in Mexico City on April 28. Photographer: Manuel Velasquez/Getty Images

Jorge Álvarez Máynez
The last to join the presidential race, he became the nominee of the newer Movimiento Ciudadano party on Jan. 9 after Nuevo León Governor Samuel García withdrew from the race. Álvarez Máynez was previously García’s campaign coordinator and a lawmaker in Mexico’s lower house.

Read More
Nuevo Leon Governor Ally Joins Mexico Presidential Race

Jorge Álvarez Máynez speaks after the second 2024 Presidential debate in Mexico City on April 28.
Jorge Álvarez Máynez speaks after the second 2024 Presidential debate in Mexico City on April 28. Photographer: Carl de Souza/AFP/Getty Images

The Economy

López Obrador is leaving behind an economy that has consistently exceeded analyst expectations for growth, as well as a strong peso, declining unemployment and gains in the stock exchange. For many Mexicans, government programs have helped ease pressure caused by inflation, which may translate into votes for continuity at the polling booth.

The Mexican Markets Pulse

Note: CDS show the riskiness of Mexican debt with the cost of insuring $10 million worth of bonds against default Source: Bloomberg

The presidency isn’t without challenges. Chief among them will be dealing with state-owned Petroleos Mexicanos, with a $106 billion debt pile that makes it the world’s most indebted oil company.

López Obrador has been lavishing support on Pemex in the form of tax cuts and capital injections, which haven’t reversed the company’s financial decline. His nationalistic policies also curtailed private-sector investment in Mexico’s oil industry.

A key question will be how his successor addresses that problem. It’s been a recurring topic in the campaigns, with the leading candidates proposing tapping renewable energy sources. Sheinbaum has also proposed refinancing Pemex’s debt.

More on Energy
Sheinbaum Wants Debt-Laden Pemex to Go Green
Mexico’s Gálvez Wants Sweeping Energy Reforms


Security

Also top of mind for voters across the country will be security, according to polls that place it as Mexico’s biggest problem.

Even as the situation worsens, many voters still dread returning to violent drug wars of past administrations, prompting some hesitation to vote against the ruling Morena party.

Homicides Hit a Record High on AMLO’s Watch in Mexico

Note: SESNSP changed its methodology in 2017 Source: Secretariado Ejecutivo del Sistema Nacional de Seguridad Pública

While López Obrador emphasizes he has brought the homicide rate down, numbers are near records and it has become a hot-button issue for the candidates. Gálvez has made it the core of her campaign, with the slogan “For a Mexico without fear.”

Critics of López Obrador’s approach have pointed to how he tasked the armed forces with building infrastructure — from a tourist train in the Yucatan peninsula to an equine reproduction center — to the detriment of security. Read our Big Take investigation.


And AMLO?

Among the many questions that remain are how much of a role the president, whose approval stands close to 60%, will stay present in Mexico’s political landscape once his term is over. So far, he has said he will retire to his ranch in Palenque in the south. In the lead-up to the campaign, López Obrador unveiled a swath of 20 long-shot constitutional reforms aimed at energizing his base and underscoring the ruling Morena party’s values. Constitutional changes require the support of a two-thirds majority in Congress to pass, with the ruling party currently falling short.

Andrés Manuel López Obrador speaks during his daily morning press conference in Mazatlan, Sinaloa State, Mexico, on April 8.
Andrés Manuel López Obrador speaks during his daily morning press conference in Mazatlan, Sinaloa State, Mexico, on April 8. Photographer: Rashide Frias/AFP/Getty Images

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