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1964 Mexican general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1964 Mexican general election

5 July 1964
Presidential election
← 1958
1970 →
 
NomineeGustavo Díaz OrdazJosé González Torres
PartyPRIPAN
Popular vote8,368,4461,034,337
Percentage88.82%10.98%

Results by state (Díaz Ordaz won in all states)

President before election

Adolfo López Mateos
PRI

ElectedPresident

Gustavo Díaz Ordaz
PRI


  • Federal elections

flagMexico portal
Díaz Ordaz campaign items

General elections were held inMexico on 5 July 1964.[1] The presidential elections were won byGustavo Díaz Ordaz, who received 89% of the vote. In the Chamber of Deputies election, theInstitutional Revolutionary Party won 175 of the 210 seats.[2]

The elected deputies served from 1964 to 1967 (46th Congress [es]) while the senators served from 1964 to 1970 (46th and47th Congresses).

The 1964 election was the first to use theparty deputy mechanism: a form of proportional representation through which three parties other than the hegemonicInstitutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) – none of which won anyfirst-past-the-post districts – were allocated 32 seats.[3][4]

Results

[edit]

President

[edit]
CandidatePartyVotes%
Gustavo Díaz OrdazInstitutional Revolutionary Party8,368,44688.82
José González TorresNational Action Party1,034,33710.98
Other candidates19,4020.21
Total9,422,185100.00
Registered voters/turnout13,589,594
Source: Nohlen

By State

[edit]
StateDíaz Ordaz
(PRI +PARM +PPS)
González Torres
(PAN)
Total
Votes%Votes%
Aguascalientes67.33891.26%6.4538.74%73.791
Baja California142.94878.59%38.94621.41%181.894
Baja California Sur25.97596.91%8273.09%26.802
Campeche56.81195.96%2.3944.04%59.205
Chihuahua223.95279.34%58.33220.66%282.284
Coahuila247.12593.41%17.4366.59%264.561
Colima34.61387.45%4.96712.55%39.580
Durango206.65386.41%32.49013.59%239.143
Federal District1.061.86274.90%355.79825.10%1.417.660
Guanajuato333.52179.62%85.35020.38%418.871
Guerrero385.25197.01%11.8672.99%397.118
Hidalgo339.87398.43%5.4071.57%345.280
Jalisco512.95787.05%76.32812.95%589.285
Michoacán335,80586.12%54,11613.88%389,911
Morelos110.36194.24%6.7405.76%117.101
Nayarit70.69892.56%5.6797.44%76.377
Nuevo León220.56884.41%40.73315.59%261.301
Oaxaca432.77396.64%15.0363.36%447.809
Puebla519.14693.81%34.2756.19%553.421
Querétaro101.99691.30%9.7258.70%111.721
Quintana Roo16.95496.99%5263.01%17.480
San Luis Potosí259.68291.30%24.7578.70%284.439
Sinaloa209.82898.09%4.0841.91%213.912
Sonora155.27798.46%2.4241.54%157.701
State of Mexico463.26991.74%54.1168.26%504.969
Tabasco146.65499.38%9140.62%147.568
Tamaulipas290.02696.61%10.1853.39%300.211
Tlaxcala100.83498.30%1.7401.70%102.574
Veracruz660.41996.81%21.7593.19%682.178
Yucatán177.79485.93%29.10614.07%206.900
Zacatecas141.42679.29%36.94220.71%178.368
Total8.384.51587.69%1.040.71810.98%9.444.645
Source:CEDE

Senate

[edit]
PartyVotes%Seats
Institutional Revolutionary Party7,837,36487.8360
National Action Party1,001,04511.220
Popular Socialist Party57,6170.650
Authentic Party of the Mexican Revolution13,0070.150
Non-registered candidates13,9680.160
Total8,923,001100.0060
Registered voters/turnout13,589,594
Source: Nohlen, Sachs[5]

Chamber of Deputies

[edit]
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Institutional Revolutionary Party7,807,91286.26175+3
National Action Party1,042,39611.5220+15
Popular Socialist Party123,8371.3710+9
Authentic Party of the Mexican Revolution64,4090.715+5
Non-registered candidates12,9700.1400
Total9,051,524100.00210+32
Registered voters/turnout13,589,594
Source: Nohlen

References

[edit]
  1. ^Dieter Nohlen (2005)Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p453ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  2. ^Nohlen, p468
  3. ^Sánchez Maldonado, César (31 March 2022)."Oposición política, movimientos sociales y apertura controlada: la reforma electoral de 1963 en México" [Political opposition, social movements, and controlled opening: the 1963 electoral reform in Mexico].Revista Historia Autónoma.20.Universidad Autónoma de Madrid: 105.doi:10.15366/rha2022.20.005. Retrieved3 October 2025.
  4. ^Gómez Tagle, Silvia (2001).La transición inconclusa: treinta años de elecciones en México, 1964-1994 (2nd ed.). Mexico City:El Colegio de México. p. 77.ISBN 9789681210427. Retrieved3 October 2025.
  5. ^Moshe Y. Sachs (1967)Worldmark Encyclopedia of the Nations: Americas, p184
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