2003 Mexican legislative election

Results

Party Constituency PR Seats +/-
Votes % Votes %
National Action Party8,189,69931.88,219,64931.8151-56
Institutional Revolutionary Party6,166,35823.96,196,17124.0224+16
Party of the Democratic Revolution4,694,36518.24,707,00918.297+44
Alliance for All Coalition3,637,68514.13,637,68514.00New
Ecologist Green Party of Mexico1,063,7414.11,068,7214.1170
Labor Party640,7242.5642,2902.56-1
Convergence603,3922.3605,1562.35New
México Posible242,2800.9243,2610.90New
Social Alliance Party197,4880.8198,0750.80-2
Citizen Force Party123,4990.5124,0220.50New
Mexican Liberal Party108,3770.4108,8440.40New
Party of the Nationalist Society72,0290.372,2670.30-3
Non-registered candidates16,3590.116,4470.100
Invalid/blank votes896,649899,227
Total26,651,64510026,738,9241005000
Source: Nohlen, Federal Election Institute
gollark: What if you make an optimizing interpreter which detects common programs and then just runs efficient implementations of them?
gollark: osmarks.tk didn't, though.
gollark: Go's assembly thing is actually used to write a bunch of internal things. Java/Python bytecode is, as far as I know, just a convenient mid-level representation.
gollark: > more like Go awayindeed.
gollark: Also, I think making up a dedicated assembly thing is basically the *point* of asm2bf, instead of some bizarre implementation detail like in Go.

References

  1. Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p453 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  2. Nohlen, p455
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