| Guerrero's 2nd | |
|---|---|
Chamber of Deputies of Mexico | |
| 2nd district since 2022 | |
| Incumbent | |
| Member | Yoloczin Domínguez Serna |
| Party | ▌ Morena |
| Congress | 66th (2024–2027) |
| District | |
| State | Guerrero |
| Head town | Acapulco |
| Coordinates | 16°52′N99°51′W / 16.867°N 99.850°W |
| Covers | Municipality of Acapulco (part) |
| Region | Fourth |
| Precincts | 149 |
| Population | 387,126 (2020 Census) |
The 2nd federal electoral district of Guerrero (Spanish : Distrito electoral federal 02 de Guerrero) is one of the 300 electoral districts into which Mexico is divided for elections to the federal Chamber of Deputies and one of eight such districts in the state of Guerrero. [1]
It elects one deputy to the lower house of Congress for each three-year legislative period by means of the first-past-the-post system. Votes cast in the district also count towards the calculation of proportional representation ("plurinominal") deputies elected from the fourth region. [2] [3]
The current member for the district, elected in the 2024 general election, is Yoloczin Domínguez Serna of the National Regeneration Movement (Morena). [4] [5]
Guerrero lost a congressional seat in the 2023 redistricting process carried out by the National Electoral Institute (INE). Under the new districting plan, which is to be used for the 2024, 2027 and 2030 federal elections, [6] the 2nd district was relocated to the south-eastern portion of the municipality of Acapulco, comprising 149 precincts (secciones electorales); the remainder of the municipality makes up the 4th district. [7] [8]
The district's head town (cabecera distrital), where results from individual polling stations are gathered together and tallied, is the resort city of Acapulco. The district reported a population of 387,126 in the 2020 Census. [1]
| 1974 | 1978 | 1996 | 2005 | 2017 | 2023 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guerrero | 6 | 10 | 10 | 9 | 9 | 8 |
| Chamber of Deputies | 196 | 300 | ||||
| Sources: [1] [9] [10] [11] | ||||||
Because of shifting population patterns, Guerrero currently has two fewer districts than the ten the state was assigned under the 1977 electoral reforms that set the national total at 300. [10]
2017–2022
2005–2017
1996–2005
1978–1996
| | |
|---|---|
| Current | |
| | PAN |
| | PRI |
| | PT |
| | PVEM |
| | MC |
| | Morena |
| Defunct or local only | |
| | PLM |
| | PNR |
| | PRM |
| | PNM |
| | PP |
| | PPS |
| | PARM |
| | PFCRN |
| | Convergencia |
| | PANAL |
| | PSD |
| | PES |
| | PES |
| | PRD |
| Election | District won by | Party or coalition | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 [49] | Andrés Manuel López Obrador | Juntos Haremos Historia | 58.8368 |
| 2024 [50] | Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo | Sigamos Haciendo Historia | 80.9293 |