| Yucatán's 5th | |
|---|---|
Chamber of Deputies of Mexico | |
5th district since 2023 | |
| Incumbent | |
| Member | Jazmín Yaneli Villanueva Moo |
| Party | ▌Morena |
| Congress | 66th (2024–2027) |
| District | |
| State | Yucatán |
| Head town | Umán |
| Coordinates | 20°53′N89°45′W / 20.883°N 89.750°W /20.883; -89.750 |
| Covers | 29 municipalities
|
| PR region | Third |
| Precincts | 186 |
| Population | 415,271 (2020 Census) |
| Indigenous | Yes (81%) |


The5th federal electoral district of Yucatán (Spanish:Distrito electoral federal 05 de Yucatán) is one of the300 electoral districts into whichMexico is divided for elections to the federalChamber of Deputies and one of six such districts in thestate ofYucatán.[1]
It elects onedeputy to the lower house ofCongress for each three-year legislative period by means of thefirst-past-the-post system. Votes cast in the district also count towards the calculation of proportional representation ("plurinominal") deputies elected from thethird region.[2][3]
Created as part of the 1996 redistricting process, it was first contested in the1997 mid-term election.[4]
The current member for the district, elected in the2024 general election, isJazmín Yaneli Villanueva Moo of theNational Regeneration Movement (Morena).[5][6]
Yucatán gained a congressional seat in the 2023 redistricting process carried out by theNational Electoral Institute (INE). Under the new districting plan, which is to be used for the2024,2027 and2030 federal elections,[7]the reconfigured 5th district is located in the south and west of the state. It comprises 186electoral precincts (secciones electorales) across 29municipalities:[8][9]
The head town (cabecera distrital), where results from individual polling stations are gathered together and tallied, is the city ofUmán. The district had a population of 415,271 in the 2020 Census and, withIndigenous andAfrodescendent inhabitants accounting for over 81% of that number, Yucatán's 5th – like all the state's electoral districts, both local and federal – is classified by the INE as an indigenous district.[1][a]
| 1974 | 1978 | 1996 | 2005 | 2017 | 2023 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yucatán | 3 | 4 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 6 |
| Chamber of Deputies | 196 | 300 | ||||
| Sources:[1][10][11][12] | ||||||
2017–2022
2005–2017
1996–2005
| Current | |
| PAN | |
| PRI | |
| PT | |
| PVEM | |
| MC | |
| Morena | |
| Defunct or local only | |
| PLM | |
| PNR | |
| PRM | |
| PNM | |
| PP | |
| PPS | |
| PARM | |
| PFCRN | |
| Convergencia | |
| PANAL | |
| PSD | |
| PES | |
| PES | |
| PRD | |
| Election | Deputy | Party | Term | Legislature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | Carlos Sobrino Sierra [es][17] | 1997–2000 | 57th Congress | |
| 2000 | Rosa Elena Baduy Isaac[18] | 2000–2003 | 58th Congress | |
| 2003 | Ángel Canul Pacab[19][b] | 2003–2006 | 59th Congress | |
| 2006 | Gerardo Escaroz Soler[21] | 2006–2009 | 60th Congress | |
| 2009 | Martín Enrique Castillo Ruz[22] | 2009–2012 | 61st Congress | |
| 2012 | Marco Alonso Vela Reyes[23] Alberto Leónides Escamilla Cerón[24] | 2012–2015 2015 | 62nd Congress | |
| 2015 | Felipe Cervera Hernández[25] Rafael Chan Magaña[26] | 2015–2018 2018 | 63rd Congress | |
| 2018 | Juan José Canul Pérez[27] | 2018–2021 | 64th Congress | |
| 2021 | Carmen Navarrete Navarro [es][28] | 2021–2024 | 65th Congress | |
| 2024[5] | Jazmín Yaneli Villanueva Moo[6] | 2024–2027 | 66th Congress |
| Election | District won by | Party or coalition | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2018[29] | Andrés Manuel López Obrador | Juntos Haremos Historia | 35.7559 |
| 2024[30] | Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo | Sigamos Haciendo Historia | 70.0069 |