Mexico poll favorite faces ‘hate messages’ after number leaked

Presidential candidate Claudia Sheinbaum speaks outside the National Electoral Institute headquarters after officially registering her candidacy for the “Let’s Keep Making History” coalition for the 2024 presidential election in Mexico City on February 18, 2024. (Photo by Rodrigo Oropeza / AFP)

The front-runner in Mexico’s upcoming presidential election said Saturday she was being inundated with hate-filled calls and messages after her phone number was released online.

The privacy violation for Claudia Sheinbaum comes days after the incumbent, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, revealed the phone number of a journalist investigating his entourage’s alleged drug cartel links.

Sheinbaum, candidate for the ruling left-wing party, posted on X that she was being deluged with “calls and hate messages because someone published my cell phone number on social networks.”


“What they want to do is obvious, once again their attacks are as crude as they are harmless,” she said, adding that she would change her phone number.

The former Mexico City mayor faces Xochitl Galvez, from the opposition coalition, and Jorge Alvarez Maynez of the Citizens’ Movement party in the June poll.

Lopez Obrador is barred from running because of Mexico’s one-term limit.

One of the president’s sons, Jose Ramon Lopez Beltran, has also denounced the leak of his private number online.

Lopez Obrador described that leak as “shameful,” and accused his political opponents of being behind it.

On Thursday at a regular press briefing, Lopez Obrador revealed the phone number of a New York Times reporter, along with questions put to him by The New York Times.

The newspaper has reported that US law enforcement officials spent years examining claims that people close to Lopez Obrador took millions of dollars from criminal gangs.

A day later, he denied he had breached data protection regulations, saying: “There can be no law above a fundamental principle which is freedom.”

The New York Times described the incident as “a troubling and unacceptable tactic from a world leader at a time when threats against journalists are on the rise.”

Mexico’s National Institute for Transparency, Access to Information and Personal Data Protection said that it would investigate whether the disclosure broke the law.

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