Second Federal Electoral District of the Federal District
The Second Federal Electoral District of the Federal District (II Distrito Electoral Federal del Distrito Federal) is one of the 300 Electoral Districts into which Mexico is divided for the purpose of elections to the federal Chamber of Deputies and one of 27 such districts in the Federal District ("DF" or Mexico City).
![](../I/m/Distrito_Federal_Distrito_02.jpg)
District DF-II shaded blue
It elects one deputy to the lower house of Congress for each three-year legislative period, by means of the first past the post system.
District territory
Under the 2005 districting scheme, the DF's Second District covers central and western portions of the borough (delegación) of Gustavo A. Madero.[1]
Previous districting schemes
1996–2005 district
Between 1996 and 2005, the Second District covered the same area as at present, but was slightly smaller.[2]
Deputies returned to Congress from this district
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![]() | PAN |
![]() | PRI |
![]() | PRD |
![]() | PT |
![]() | PVEM |
![]() | MC |
![]() | PANAL |
PSD |
- XLII Legislature
- 1952–1955: Juan José Osorio Palacios (PRI)
- XLIII Legislature
- 1952–1955:
- XLIV Legislature
- 1958–1961:
- XLV Legislature
- 1961–1964:
- XLVI Legislature
- 1964–1967:
- XLVII Legislature
- 1967–1970:
- XLVIII Legislature
- 1970–1973:
- XLIX Legislature
- 1973–1976:
- LI Legislature
- 1976–1979: José Salvador Lima Zuno (PRI)
- LI Legislature
- 1979–1982: Ángel Olivo Solís (PRI)
- LII Legislature
- 1982–1985: Rodolfo García Pérez (PRI)
- LIII Legislature
- 1985–1988: Elba Esther Gordillo (PRI)
- LIV Legislature
- 1988–1991: Onofre Hernández Rivera (PRI)
- LV Legislature
- 1991–1994:
- LVI Legislature
- 1994–1997: José Luis Martínez Álvarez (PRI)
- LVII Legislature
- 1997–2000: Martha Irene Luna Calvo (PRD)
- LVIII Legislature
- 2000–2003: Luis Fernando Sánchez Nava (PAN)
- LIX Legislature
- 2003–2006: Miguel Ángel García Domínguez (PRD)
- LX Legislature
- 2006–2009: Javier González Garza (PRD)
gollark: Information flow: imagine some farmer, due to some detail of their climate/environment, needs extra wood or something. But the central planning models just say "each farmer needs 100 units of wood for farming 10 units of pig"; what are they meant to do?
gollark: The incentives problems: central planners aren't really as affected by how well they do their jobs as, say, someone managing a firm, and you probably lack a way to motivate people "on the ground" as it were.
gollark: What, so you just want us to be stuck at one standard of living forever? No. Technology advances and space mining will... probably eventually happen.
gollark: But that step itself is very hard, and you need to aggregate different people's preferences, and each step ends up being affected by the values of the people working on it.
gollark: There are too many goods produced for individuals to practically go around voting on what the outputs of the economy should be, so at best they can vote on a summary which someone will turn into a full thing.
References
- Instituto Federal Electoral. "Condensado del Distrito Federal" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 November 2008. Retrieved 11 November 2008.
- Instituto Federal Electoral. "Distritación 1996 del Distrito Federal" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 November 2008. Retrieved 11 November 2008.
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