• Hugo Aguilar
• Hugo Aguilar

 An indigenous lawyer, Hugo Aguilar, looks set to become Mexico’s new chief justice following Sunday’s ground-breaking judicial election.

Mexicans were asked to choose the country’s entire judiciary by direct ballot for the first time after a radical reform introduced by the governing Morena party.

With almost all the votes for the Supreme Court counted, Mr Aguilar was in the lead for the top post.

President Claudia Sheinbaum declared the elections a success, even though turnout was low at around 13 per cent.

Electoral authorities said Mr Aguilar, who is a member of the Mixtec indigenous group, was ahead of Lenia Batres, the candi­date who had the backing of the governing Morena party.

Hugo Aguilar has long cam­paigned for the rights of Mexico’s indigenous groups, which make up almost 20 per cent of the pop­ulation according to the 2020 cen­sus in which people were asked how the identified themselves.

For the past seven years, the 51-year-old constitutional law expert has served as the rights co-ordinator for the National Institute of Indigenous Peoples (INPI).

He was also a legal advisor to the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) – an indige­nous guerrilla group which staged a short-lived uprising in southern Chiapas state in 1994 – during the EZLN’s negotiations with the government in 1996.

During his campaign for the post of chief justice he had said that it was “the turn of the indig­enous and Afro-Mexican peoples to take a seat in the Supreme Court”, accusing the highest court of being stuck in the past and wedded to “principles which don’t drive real change for the people”.

Candidates with links to the governing Morena party look set to win the majority of the remain­ing eight posts on the Supreme Court, according to early results.

—BBC