Enrique Peña Nieto urged to come clean about alleged purchase of favourable coverage on Mexico's biggest television network
Read a statement from the Guardian about the Televisa story
Read a statement from the Guardian about the Televisa story

Media bias has become a central issue in
Mexico's presidential election, which Enrique Peña Nieto is currently
favourite to win. Photograph: Eduardo Verdugo/AP
Mexico's leftwing presidential candidate, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, has called on Enrique Peña Nieto, the current favourite to win the election on 1 July, to come clean about the alleged purchase of favourable coverage on Mexico's biggest television network.
His comments came a day after the Guardian published documents implicating the Televisa network in the sale of news and entertainment content to promote Peña Nieto's national profile when he was the governor of Mexico state and preparing his presidential bid.
"They
should hand over all the information, the contracts, that they haven't
wanted to show," López Obrador told reporters. "Of course they have
them, and we need to see how much they paid, for what kind of message,
and if they include all the promotion of Peña Nieto on the television."
López
Obrador, who represents a coalition of leftist parties called the
Progressive Movement – and who in the past has also been criticised for
failing to release details of his own publicity budget – said he wanted
to study the documents before saying anything more.
López Obrador did not mention the PowerPoint presentation mentioned in the Guardian story that detailed an apparent strategy within Televisa to destroy his first bid for the presidency in the 2006 election.
Several
leading Mexican newspapers and radio shows led on the Guardian report
in their Friday editions, and the story has become a trending topic on
Twitter in the country. The allegations are particularly sensitive in
the current electoral climate, in which student demonstrators accusing
Televisa of favouring Peña Nieto have turned alleged media bias into a
central issue of the campaign.
In response to a question about the
documents on Friday, Peña Nieto told reporters that "they have no solid
basis and are not authentic". The candidate insisted that all publicity
spending during his years as governor of the State of Mexico is
publicly open to scrutiny on an official website.
Televisa did not
feature the allegations in its main nightly news show on Thursday
despite the fact that it had already demanded a public apology from the
Guardian. In a statement the network – which is the largest in the
Spanish-speaking world – lamented what it called the use of "apocryphal
material that has been repeatedly published and denied".
The only
document in the Guardian's report which had previously been published by
the Mexican media was one of several versions of a promotional budget
apparently developed for Peña Nieto towards the end of 2005 by a
Televisa-linked company called Radar Servicios Especializados.
The
morning news programme on MVS Radio included an interview with a former
Televisa employee who revealed an internal electronic chat about that
document immediately after its publication in the weekly magazine
Proceso that same year.
According to the former employee, Laura
Barranco, a news anchor at the channel, Carlos Loret de Mola, who has
been a vocal defender of Televisa in recent weeks, wrote: "Everything,
absolutely everything, is true."
The Guardian has also been able to trace evidence which appears to corroborate another file, referring to a promotional campaign for the then president, Vicente Fox, also in 2005.
The
document states that, while the cost of the campaign was 60m pesos
(£2.8m), the presidential office has been directly billed for only 3m
pesos pending instructions on how to arrange payment of the rest.
Official accounts for publicity spending by the presidential office for
that year include a payment of 3m pesos to Radar.
In a speech made
after signing a new anti-corruption law, President Felipe Calderón
called on the media "not to generate behaviour that is equivalent to
corruption, where the truth of the information is subject to an economic
transaction".
Officially reported publicity spending promoting
federal government activities has increased sharply during the Calderón
administration.
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