L Legislature of the Mexican Congress

The L Legislature of the Mexican Congress of Union met from 1976 to 1979. It consisted of senators and deputies who were members of their respective chambers. They began their duties on September 1, 1976 and ended on August 31, 1979.

The senators and deputies were elected to office in the 1976 elections. The senators were elected for a period of six years (so they maintained their seat in the next legislature), and the deputies were elected for a period of three years.

Members edit

The make up of the L Legislature was as follows:

Senate of the Republic edit

The members of the Mexican Senate were elected two from each state and the Federal District, giving a total of 64 senators. For the first time in history a senator was elected who did not belong to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).[1] Jorge Cruickshank García had been nominated by the PPS,[1] however the PRI did not lose this seat, because it formed an electoral alliance with the winning party. Thus this senator posed no opposition to the PRI or the government during his term.

Number of Senators by political party edit

Party Senators
  Institutional Revolutionary Party 63
  Popular Socialist Party 1

The 64 Senators forming the L Legislature are the following:

Senators by state edit

State Senator Party State Senator Party
Aguascalientes Rodolfo Landeros Gallegos
 
Nayarit Leobardo Ramos Martínez
 
Aguascalientes Héctor Hugo Olivares Ventura[1]
 
Nayarit Daniel Espinoza Galindo
 
Baja California Rafael García Vázquez
Replaced Roberto de la Madrid Romandía
 
Nuevo León Napoleón Gómez Sada
 
Baja California Oscar Baylón Chacón
 
Nuevo León Adrián Yáñez Martínez
 
Baja California Sur Alberto Alvarado Arámburo
 
Oaxaca Rodolfo Alaves Flores
 
Baja California Sur Víctor Manuel Liceaga Ruibal
Replaced Marcelo Rubio Ruiz[a]
 
Oaxaca Jorge Cruickshank García[1]
 
Campeche Rosa María Martínez Denegri
Replaced Carlos Sansores Pérez
 
Puebla Horacio Labastida Muñoz
 
Campeche Joaquín Repetto Ocampo
Replaced Fernando Rafful Miguel
 
Puebla Blas Chumacero
 
Chiapas Roberto Corzo Gay
 
Querétaro Rafael Camacho Guzmán
 
Chiapas Horacio Castellanos Coutiño
 
Querétaro Telésforo Trejo Uribe
 
Chihuahua Óscar Ornelas
 
Quintana Roo Vicente Coral Martínez
 
Chihuahua Mario Carballo Pazos
 
Quintana Roo José Blanco Peyrefitte
 
Coahuila Eliseo Mendoza Berrueto
 
San Luis Potosí Rafael Tristán López
 
Coahuila Gustavo Guerra Castaños
 
San Luis Potosí Francisco Padrón Puyou
 
Colima Griselda Álvarez
 
Sinaloa Hilda Anderson Nevárez
 
Colima Antonio Salazar y Salazar
 
Sinaloa Gilberto Ruiz Almada
 
Durango Ignacio Castillo Mena
 
Sonora Juan José Gastelum García
 
Durango Tomás Rangel Perales
 
Sonora Adolfo de la Huerta Oriol
 
Guanajuato Euquerio Guerrero López
 
Tabasco Antonio Ocampo Ramírez
Replaced Carlos Pellicer
 
Guanajuato Jesús Cabrera Muñoz Ledo
 
Tabasco Nicolás Reynés Berazaluce
Replaced David Gustavo Gutiérrez
 
Guerrero Jorge Soberón Acevedo
 
Tamaulipas Morelos Jaime Canseco González
 
Guerrero Alejandro Cervantes Delgado
 
Tamaulipas Martha Chávez Padrón
 
Hidalgo Humberto Lugo Gil
 
Tlaxcala Jesús Hernández Rojas
 
Hidalgo Vacant
By leave of Guillermo Rossell de la Lama and
Jorge Rojo Lugo
 
Tlaxcala Rafael Minor Franco
 
Jalisco José María Martínez Rodríguez
 
Veracruz Silverio Ricardo Alvarado
 
Jalisco Arnulfo Villaseñor Saavedra
 
Veracruz Sergio Martínez Mendoza
 
State of Mexico Leonardo Rodríguez Alcaine
 
Yucatán Víctor Cervera Pacheco
 
State of Mexico Gustavo Baz
 
Yucatán Graciliano Alpuche Pinzón
 
Michoacán José Luis Escobar Herrera
Replaced Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas Solórzano
 
Zacatecas Jorge Gabriel García Rojas
 
Michoacán Guillermo Morfín García
 
Zacatecas José Guadalupe Cervantes Corona
 
Morelos Angel Ventura Valle
 
Federal District of Mexico Luis del Toro Calero
Replaced Hugo Cervantes del Río
 
Morelos Javier Rondero Zubieta
 
Federal District of Mexico Joaquín Gamboa Pascoe
 

Chamber of Deputies edit

In the L Legislature, the Chamber of Deputies was composed of a total of 238 deputies, of which 196 were elected by majority vote in each constituency and 41 more were deputies by party. These were allocated in proportion to the votes that the non-winning parties obtained in the districts.

The composition of the House of Representatives in the L Legislature was as follows:

Number of Deputies by political party edit

Party Deputies
  Institutional Revolutionary Party 196[2]
  National Action Party 20[2]
  Popular Socialist Party 12[2]
  Partido Auténtico de la Revolución Mexicana 9[2]

Deputies from single-member districts (plurality) edit

State District Deputy Party State District Deputy Party
Aguascalientes 1 Jesús Martínez Gortari   México 8 Armando Labra Manjarrez  
Aguascalientes 2 Camilo López Gómez   México 9 Juan Ortíz Montoya  
Baja California 1 Ricardo Eguía Valderrama   México 10 José Luis García García  
Baja California 2 Alfonso Ballesteros Pelayo   México 11 Guillermo Choussal Valladares  
Baja California 3 Alfonso Garzón Santibáñez   México 12 Cecilio Salas Gálvez  
Baja California Sur 1 Víctor Manuel Peralta Osuna   México 13 Pedro Ávila Hernández  
Baja California Sur 2 Agapito Duarte Hernández   México 14 Armando Hurtado Navarro  
Campeche 1 Abelardo Carrillo Zavala   México 15 Héctor Ximénez González  
Campeche 2 Jorge Muñoz Icthé   Michoacán 1 Nicanor Gómez Reyes  
Chiapas 1 Jaime Sabines   Michoacán 2 Antonio Jaimes Aguilar  
Chiapas 2 Fernando Correa Suárez   Michoacán 3 Raúl Lemus García  
Chiapas 3 Homero Tovilla Cristiani   Michoacán 4 Roberto Garibay Ochoa  
Chiapas 4 Manuel Villafuerte Mijangos   Michoacán 5 Jaime Bravo Ramírez  
Chiapas 5 Gonzalo Esponda Zebadúa   Michoacán 6 Eduardo Estrada Pérez  
Chiapas 6 Leonardo León Cerpa   Michoacán 7 Juan Rodríguez González  
Chihuahua 1 Alberto Ramírez Gutiérrez   Michoacán 8 Héctor Terán Torres  
Chihuahua 2 Oswaldo Rodríguez González   Michoacán 9 Roberto Ruiz del Río  
Chihuahua 3 José Reyes Estrada Aguirre   Morelos 1 Antonio Riva Palacio López  
Chihuahua 4 Juan Ernesto Madera Prieto   Morelos 2 Filomeno López Rea  
Chihuahua 5 Artemio Iglesias   Nayarit 1 Ignacio Langarica Quintana  
Chihuahua 6 José Refugio Mar de la Rosa   Nayarit 2 María Hilaria Domínguez Arvizu  
Coahuila 1 José de las Fuentes Rodríguez   Nuevo León 1 Carlota Vargas Garza  
Coahuila 2 Carlos Ortiz Tejeda   Nuevo León 2 Heriberto Santos Lozano  
Coahuila 3 Fernando Cabrera Rodríguez   Nuevo León 3 Raúl Caballero Escamilla  
Coahuila 4 Julián Muñoz Uresti   Nuevo León 4 Eleazar Ruiz Cerda  
Colima 1 Ramón Serrano García   Nuevo León 5 Arturo Luna Lugo  
Colima 2 Fernando Moreno Peña   Nuevo León 6 Jesús Puente Leyva  
Federal District 1 Eduardo Andrade Sánchez[3]   Nuevo León 7 Roberto Olivares Vera  
Federal District 2 José Salvador Lima Zuno   Oaxaca 1 Lucía Betanzos de Bay  
Federal District 3 Carlos Riva Palacio Velazco   Oaxaca 2 Gustavo Santaella Cortés  
Federal District 4 Enrique Ramírez y Ramírez   Oaxaca 3 Ericel Gómez Nucamendi  
Federal District 5 Miguel Molina Herrera   Oaxaca 4 Ernesto Aguilar Flores  
Federal District 6 Alfonso Rodríguez Rivera   Oaxaca 5 Luis Candelario Jiménez Sosa  
Federal District 7 María Elena Márques de Torruco[4]   Oaxaca 6 Heladio Ramírez López  
Federal District 8 Julio César Mena Brito   Oaxaca 7 Zoraida Bernal de Badillo  
Federal District 9 Venustiano Reyes López   Oaxaca 8 Julio Esponda Solana  
Federal District 10 Gloria Carrillo Salinas   Oaxaca 9 Raúl Bolaños Cacho Guzmán  
Federal District 11 Jaime Aguilar Álvarez   Puebla 1 Nicolás Pérez Pavón  
Federal District 12 Miguel López Riveroll   Puebla 2 Jorge Domínguez Ramírez  
Federal District 13 Rodolfo González Guevara   Puebla 3 Antonio Montes García  
Federal District 14 Jorge Mendicutti Negrete   Puebla 4 Antonio Hernández Jiménez  
Federal District 15 Juan José Osorio Palacios   Puebla 5 Sacramento Jofre Vázquez  
Federal District 16 Alfonso Argudín Laria   Puebla 6 Antonio Tenorio Adame  
Federal District 17 Héctor Hernández Casanova   Puebla 7 Guadalupe López Bretón  
Federal District 18 Hugo Díaz Velázquez   Puebla 8 Jesús Sarabia y Ordóñez  
Federal District 19 Abraham Martínez Rivero   Puebla 9 Jorge Murad Macluf
Replaced Manuel Rivera Anaya
 
Federal District 20 Jesús González Balandrano   Puebla 10 Adolfo Rodríguez Juárez  
Federal District 21 Martha Andrade de Del Rosal   Querétaro 1 Eduardo Ugalde Vargas  
Federal District 22 Ifigenia Martínez[5]   Querétaro 2 Vicente Montes Velázquez  
Federal District 23 Enrique Soto Izquierdo   Quintana Roo 1 Carlos Gómez Barrera  
Federal District 24 Enrique Álvarez del Castillo   Quintana Roo 2 Emilio Oxte Tah  
Federal District 25 Celia Torres de Sánchez   San Luis Potosí 1 Roberto Leyva Torres  
Federal District 26 Humberto Serrano Pérez[6]   San Luis Potosí 2 Guadalupe Vega Macías  
Federal District 27 Hugo Roberto Castro Aranda   San Luis Potosí 3 Víctor Maldonado Moreleón  
Durango 1 Ángel Sergio Guerrero Mier   San Luis Potosí 4 Héctor González Lárraga  
Durango 2 Maximiliano Silerio Esparza   San Luis Potosí 5 Eusebio López Sáinz  
Durango 3 Salvador Reyes Nevárez   Sinaloa 1 Tolentino Rodríguez Félix  
Durango 4 José Ramírez Gamero   Sinaloa 2 Felipe Armenta Gallardo  
Guanajuato 1 Esteban Mario Garaiz   Sinaloa 3 Rafael Oceguera Ramos  
Guanajuato 2 Enrique Gómez Guerra   Sinaloa 4 Antonio Toledo Corro  
Guanajuato 3 Juan Varela Mayorga   Sinaloa 5 Patricio Robles Robles  
Guanajuato 4 Miguel Montes García   Sonora 1 Ricardo Castillo Peralta  
Guanajuato 5 Aurelio García Sierra   Sonora 2 César Augusto Tapia Quijada  
Guanajuato 6 Alfredo Carrillo Juárez   Sonora 3 José Luis Vargas González  
Guanajuato 7 Enrique León Hernández   Sonora 4 Bernabé Arana León  
Guanajuato 8 Graciela Meave Torrescano   Tabasco 1 Luis Priego Ortiz  
Guanajuato 9 Donaciano Luna Hernández   Tabasco 2 Roberto Madrazo Pintado  
Guerrero 1 Isaías Gómez Salgado   Tabasco 3 Francisco Rabelo Cupido  
Guerrero 2 Isaías Duarte Martínez   Tamaulipas 1 Abdón Rodríguez Sánchez  
Guerrero 3 Miguel Bello Pineda   Tamaulipas 2 Oscar Mario Santos Gómez  
Guerrero 4 Hortensia Santoyo de Martínez   Tamaulipas 3 Agapito González Cavazos  
Guerrero 5 Reveriano García Castrejón   Tamaulipas 4 Aurora Cruz de Mora  
Guerrero 6 Salustio Salgado Guzmán   Tamaulipas 5 Fernando San Pedro Salem  
Hidalgo 1 Ladislao Castillo Feregrino   Tamaulipas 6 Julio Martínez Rodríguez  
Hidalgo 2 Luis José Dorantes Segovia   Tlaxcala 1 Nazario Romero Díaz  
Hidalgo 3 Efraín Mera Arias   Tlaxcala 2 Antonio Vega García  
Hidalgo 4 José Antonio Zorrilla Pérez   Veracruz 1 Guilebaldo Flores Fuentes  
Hidalgo 5 Vicente Trejo Callejas   Veracruz 2 Pericles Namorado Urrutia  
Jalisco 1 Guillermo Cosío Vidaurri   Veracruz 3 Emilio Salgado Zubiaga  
Jalisco 2 Reynaldo Dueñas Villaseñor   Veracruz 4 Manuel Gutiérrez Zamora Zamudio  
Jalisco 3 Félix Flores Gómez   Veracruz 5 Seth Cardeña Luna  
Jalisco 4 Porfirio Cortés Silva   Veracruz 6 Carlos Manuel Vargas Sánchez  
Jalisco 5 José Mendoza Padilla   Veracruz 7 Daniel Nogueira Huerta  
Jalisco 6 Rigoberto González Quezada   Veracruz 8 Celeste Castillo Moreno  
Jalisco 7 Ma. Refugio Castillón Coronado   Veracruz 9 Mario Martínez Dector  
Jalisco 8 Ricardo Chávez Pérez   Veracruz 10 Pastor Munguía González  
Jalisco 9 María Guadalupe Urzúa Flores   Veracruz 11 Miguel Portela Cruz  
Jalisco 10 Francisco Javier Santillán Oceguera   Veracruz 12 Mario Hernández Posadas  
Jalisco 11 Héctor Castañeda Jiménez   Veracruz 13 Francisco Cinta Guzmán  
Jalisco 12 Rafael González Pimienta   Veracruz 14 Juan Meléndez Pacheco  
Jalisco 13 Jesús Alberto Mora López   Veracruz 15 Eduardo Thomae Domínguez  
México 1 Gildardo Herrera   Yucatán 1 Mirna Hoyos Schlamme  
México 2 Josefina Esquivel de Quintana   Yucatán 2 Rubén Calderón Cecilio  
México 3 José Delgado Valle   Yucatán 3 Víctor Manzanilla Schaffer  
México 4 Arturo Martínez Legorreta   Zacatecas 1 Gustavo Salinas Íñiguez  
México 5 José Martínez Martínez   Zacatecas 2 Crescencio Herrera Herrera  
México 6 Rosendo Franco Escamilla   Zacatecas 3 José Leal Longoria  
México 7 Julio Zamora Bátiz   Zacatecas 4 Julián Macías Pérez  

Deputies by party edit

Deputy Party Deputy Party Deputy Party
Fausto Alarcón Escalona
 
José Ortega Mendoza
 
Eugenio Soto Sánchez
 
Gonzalo Altamirano Dimas
 
Francisco Pedraza Villarreal
 
Rafael Campos López
 
María Elena Álvarez Bernal
 
Francisco José Peniche Bolio
 
Víctor Manuel Carrasco
 
Miguel Campos Martínez
 
Adrián Peña Soto
 
Felipe Cerecedo López
 
Guillermo Carlos de Carcer
 
Jacinto Silva Flores
 
Alberto Contreras Valencia
 
Jorge Garabito Martínez
 
Juan Torres Ciprés
 
Francisco Hernández Juárez
 
Ramón Garcilita Partida
 
Saúl Castorena Monterrubio
 
Marcela Lombardo Otero
 
Miguel Hernández Labastida
 
Fortino Garza Cárdenas
 
Jesús Luján Gutiérrez
 
Guillermo Islas Olguín
 
Pedro González Azcuaga
 
Francisco Ortiz Mendoza
 
Sergio Lujambio Rafols
 
Raúl Guillén Pérez Vargas
 
Román Ramírez Contreras
 
Rosalba Magallón Camacho
 
Manuel Hernández Alvarado
 
Héctor Ramírez Cuéllar
 
José Luis Martínez Galicia
 
Edilio Hinojosa López
 
Idelfonso Reyes Soto
 
Tomás Nava de la Rosa
 
Apolinar Ramírez Meneses
 
Ezequiel Rodríguez Otal
 
Teodoro Ortega García
 
Arcelia Sánchez
 

Presidents of the high commission of the Camara of Deputies edit

  • (1976 - 1977): Augusto Gómez Villanueva  
  • (1977 - 1979): Rodolfo González Guevara  
  • (1979): Antonio Riva Palacio López  

Main accomplishments edit

It was the L Legislature that, in 1977, adopted the first political reforms to occur in Mexico. This reform, negotiated by Secretary of the Interior Jesús Reyes Heroles, included legal recognition of political organizations from the left, traditionally marginalized and pushed into armed struggle, especially after the events of 1968 and which degenerated into a dirty war during the 1970s.[7]

Legal reform, known formally as the Ley de Organizaciones Políticas y Procedimientos Electorales (LOPPE) (Law of Political Organizations and Electoral Procedures), defined and made possible procedures for the registration of new political parties (in 1977 legally there were only the PRI, the National Action Party) (PAN), the Popular Socialist Party (PPS) and the Authentic Party of the Mexican Revolution (PARM)).[2] This allowed for the registration, for the first time in 40 years of the Mexican Communist Party, which was followed by the National Assembly of the Socialist Left, the Mexican Democratic Party and the Social Democratic Party.

In addition, the (LOPPE) increased the size of the Chamber of Deputies, increasing the number of electoral districts from 196 to 300, and establishing deputies by proportional representation, replacing the previous deputies by party.[7] There would be 100 such positions, resulting in the Chamber of Deputies, being composed of 400 deputies.[2]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Rubio Ruiz died on 6 January 1977.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Becerril, Andrés (11 February 2013). "Equipo forjado en la tribuna, curtidos en la arena legislativa". Excelsior. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Martinez, Sarah (May 8–9, 1999). "Changing campaign strategies in Mexico: The effects of electoral reforms on political parties" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 30, 2000. Retrieved 1 June 2013.
  3. ^ "H. Congreso del Estado de Veracruz". Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  4. ^ "Falleció la primera actriz María Elena Marqués". El Siglo de Durango. 12 November 2008.
  5. ^ "Consejeros Ciudadanos para dar seguimiento al plan para la prevención y el combate a la corrupción". Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  6. ^ "Fallece Humberto Serrano Pérez, líder máximo de la CAM". Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  7. ^ a b Klesner, Joseph L. (28–31 August 1997). "Electoral reform in Mexico's hegemonic party system: Perpetuation of privilege or democratic advance?". Retrieved 31 May 2013.

External links edit