3rd federal electoral district of Tlaxcala

Federal electoral district of Mexico From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

3rd federal electoral district of Tlaxcalamap

The 3rd federal electoral district of Tlaxcala (Distrito electoral federal 03 de Tlaxcala) is one of the 300 electoral districts into which Mexico is divided for elections to the federal Chamber of Deputies and one of three such districts in the state of Tlaxcala.

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Electoral districts of Tlaxcala under the 2022 redistricting process
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Tlaxcala under the 2017–2022 districting plan

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 this district also count towards the calculation of proportional representation ("plurinominal") deputies elected from the fourth region.[1][2]

Dissolved in 1930[a] and re-established in 1997, the district now occupies the southern portion of the state and its head town (cabecera distrital), where results from individual polling stations are gathered together and tallied, is the city of Zacatelco.[6]

Deputies returned to Congress

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Third federal electoral district of Tlaxcala
ElectionDeputyPartyTermLegislature
1916 [es] Ascención Tépal [es][7][8] 1916–1917 Constituent Congress
of Querétaro
1917 Marcelo Portillo[9] 1917–1918 27th Congress [es]
1918 Galindo Modesto González[10] 1918–1920 28th Congress
1920 Macario M. Hernández[11] PLCT 1920–1922 29th Congress
1922 [es] Macario M. Hernández[12] 1922–1924 30th Congress [es]
1924 Eduardo Fernández de Lara[13] 1924–1926 31st Congress
1926 Inés Aguilar[14] 1926–1928 32nd Congress
1928 Mauro Angulo[15] 1928–1930 33rd Congress
The 3rd district was suspended between 1930 and 1997
1997 Martha Palafox Gutiérrez[16] 1997–2000 57th Congress
2000 Albino Mendieta Cuapio[17] 2000–2003 58th Congress
2003 Federico Barbosa Gutiérrez[18] 2003–2006 59th Congress
2006 Alberto Amaro Corona[19] 2006–2009 60th Congress
2009 Perla López Loyo[20] 2009–2012 61st Congress
2012 Edilberto Algredo Jaramillo[21] 2012–2015 62nd Congress
2015 Ricardo David García Portilla[22] 2015–2018 63rd Congress
2018[23] Lorena Cuéllar Cisneros[24][b]
Claudia Pérez Rodríguez[26]
2018
2018–2021
64th Congress
2021[27] Carlos Augusto Pérez Hernández[28] 2021–2024 65th Congress
2024[29] Irma Yordana Garay Loredo[30] 2024–2027 66th Congress
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Notes

  1. An amendment to Article 52 of the Constitution in 1928 changed the original provision of "one deputy per 60,000 inhabitants" to "one deputy per 100,000";[3][4] as a result, the size of the Chamber of Deputies fell from 281 in the 1928 election to 171 in 1934.[5]
  2. Took leave of her seat to serve as the state's coordinator of development programmes. Replaced by her substitute, Claudia Pérez Rodríguez, for the remainder of her term.[25]

References

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