Twenty-first Federal Electoral District of Mexico City

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The Twenty-first Electoral District of Mexico City (XXI Distrito Electoral Federal de la Ciudad de México; previously "of the Federal District") is one of the 300 electoral districts into which Mexico is divided for the purpose of elections to the federal Chamber of Deputies and one of the 22 currently operational districts in Mexico City.[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.

District territory[edit]

Under the 2023 districting plan, which will be used for the 2024, 2027 and 2030 federal elections,[2] the Twenty-first District covers the borough (alcaldía) of Milpa Alta and the bulk of Xochimilco excluding the north-western portion assigned to the Fifth District.[3][1]

Deputies returned to Congress from this district[edit]

Mexico Parties
PAN
PRI
PRD
PT
PVEM
MC
PANAL
PSD
Morena
Twenty-First Federal Electoral District of Mexico City
Deputy Party Legislature Term
Óscar Ramírez Mijares XLV 1961–1964
Miguel Cobián Pérez XLVI 1964–1967
Óscar Ramírez Mijares XLVII 1967–1970
Héctor Ayala Guerrero XLVIII 1970–1973
Mariano Araiza Zayas XLIX 1973–1976
Martha Andrade de Del Rosal L 1976–1979
Enrique Gómez Corchado LI 1979–1982
Everardo Gámiz Fernández LII 1982–1985
Juan José Castillo Mota LIII 1985–1988
Víctor M. Sarabía Luna LIV 1988–1991
Everardo Gámiz Fernández LV 1991–1994
Ofelia Casillas Ontiveros LVI 1994–1997
Pedro Salcedo García LVII 1997–2000
Héctor González Reza LVIII 2000–2003
Miguel Ángel Toscano LIX 2003–2006
Alejandro Sánchez Camacho LX 2006–2009
Avelino Méndez Rangel LXI 2009–2012
Alejandro Sánchez Camacho LXII 2012–2015
Claudia Villanueva Huerta LXIII 2015–2018
Flor Ivone Morales Miranda LXIV 2018–2019
Karen Ivette Audiffred Fernández 2019–2021
Flor Ivone Morales Miranda LXV 2021–

References and notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Memoria de la Distritación Nacional 2021-2023" (PDF). Instituto Nacional Electoral. p. 220. Retrieved 28 May 2024.
  2. ^ De La Rosa, Yared (20 February 2023). "Nueva distritación electoral le quita diputados a la CDMX y le agrega a Nuevo León". Forbes México. Retrieved 29 May 2024.
  3. ^ "Condensado estatal distrital: CDMX". Insituto Nacional Electoral. Retrieved 29 May 2024.