Mexico began its official recount of presidential vote tallies, determined to calm fears of fraud and check a preliminary count won by the ruling party's candidate.
Conservative Felipe Calderon, already building a government, said he'd be willing to give his rival a Cabinet seat.
But leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador insisted victory was his and threatened to ignore the results because of ''serious evidence of fraud'' unless workers conducted a more thorough recount of all 41 million votes cast Sunday.
Election workers at 300 district headquarters across the country were working Wednesday around the clock to add up election-daytallies compiled by poll volunteers. With 80 percent of the tallies counted, Lopez Obrador had 37 percent, compared with 35 percent for Calderon. There was no way to know whether that trend would hold.
In an exclusive interview with The Associated Press, Calderon said he would be willing to include Lopez Obrador in his Cabinet--an effort to build a coalition government and avoid weeks of political impasse. But he didn't believe his opponent would accept and said they hadn't spoken since the election.
The preliminary count completed earlier in the week had Calderon winning by one percentage point. Leonel Cota, president of Lopez Obrador's Democratic Revolution Party, accused election officials of deliberately mishandling that count to confirm a win for Calderon and his National Action Party.
''We are not going to recognize an election that showed serious evidence of fraud, that was dirty from the start, manipulated from the start,'' Cota said.
When polls closed, citizens staffing the 130,488 polling places opened the ballot boxes and counted the votes, then sealed them into packages with their tallies attached and reported unofficial totals to the Federal Electoral Institute, or IFE. The institute then posted preliminary results on its Web site from about 41 million ballots cast.
The sealed packages were delivered to district headquarters, where elections workers used the tallies Wednesday to add up the formal, legal vote totals.
Workers were not reviewing individual ballots except when the packages appeared tampered with or their tallies were missing, illegible or inconsistent--including at least 2.6 million ballots likely to shrink Calderon's lead to 0.64 percent if included, election officials said Tuesday.
At one electoral office in Mexico City, officials opened a ballot box because the vote tally was missing. The votes were then re-counted out loud while 10 party representatives stood by with tape recorders and video cameras.
''I'm exhausted. I'm still tired from election day,'' said counter Rocio Sanchez, 41, an IFE employee. ''But this is something we have to do by law.'' Cota said Democratic Revolution would not recognize the results without a ballot-by-ballot recount. But IFE President Luis Carlos Ugalde said that was not possible.
''Mexican law is very clear on when a ballot box can be opened: only when there are problems with the vote tallies, when the tally sheet has obviously been changed, or when the box has been tampered with,'' Ugalde said.
Once the count is complete, the seven-judge Federal Electoral Tribunal hears any complaints and can overturn elections. By law, it must certify a winner by Sept. 6, and its decision is final.
Cota said the party might take its case to international tribunals.
Ugalde scolded both candidates for prematurely declaring victory, saying: ''No political party can declare or affirm, at this time, that its candidate has received the largest number of votes.'' LopezObrador called again Wednesday for his supporters to remain calm, but he could mobilize millions--as he has in past legal disputes--and he hinted Wednesday that he might.
''The political stability of the country hangs in the balance,'' he said.
In the AP interview, Calderon said demonstrations would be irresponsible.
''Elections are not won on the street,'' he said. ''They are won in the voting places.'' The review that began Wednesday is a crucial step in proving the elections were clean to a nation that emerged only six years ago from 71 years of one-party rule replete with election fraud. Failure to convince the public and candidates it has been a fair vote could spark widespread unrest.
''Such a close race is a nightmare scenario,'' said Ted Lewis, an election observer for the San Francisco-based Global Exchange. ''If the ruling party wins by a hair, a lot of people will jump to the conclusion that something is amiss.'' Most international observers said theelection was fair and properly carried out by Mexico's world-renowned system, held up as a model to emerging democracies in Iraq and Haiti.
There have been fears that the battle over the presidency could turn violent. There were scattered protests Wednesday in favor of Lopez Obrador, all of them peaceful.
About 35 people set up camp Wednesday outside IFE's gates, draping banners that accused electoral officials of being traitors, and about 300 protesters marched down Mexico City's broad Reforma Avenue carrying a banner reading: ''Respect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's victory!'' ''We're not going to let them get away with this,'' said 62-year-old Enrique Flores, a retired Mexico City school teacher.
Associated Press reporters Ioan Grillo, Regina Reyes-Heroles and Will Weissert contributed to this report.
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