a jive turkey
The Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), whose members held the presidential seat for more than 70 years in Mexico.
Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) - Institutional Revolutionary Party.
The "Partido Revolucionario Institucional" or PRI (Institutional Revolutionary Party).
The Institutional Revolutionary Party (Spanish: Partido Revolucionario Institucional - PRI) qualifies as such.
By gaining control of Mexico's government. Also by being corrupt and fixing elections after comming into power.
It didn't; at least not directly. Haiti was a French colony in the Caribbean, while Mexico was considered a territory of the Spanish Crown. What Haiti's independence did for the rest of the colonies in the Americas is that everyone else figured that if a slave revolt resulted in a successful independence war against a world power like France, it would be much easier to fight an already failing power like Spain (it didn't).
He was president in Mexico) He played a leading role in Mexico's fight for independence from Spain in 1821. In 1829, he fought against Spain again as the European power tried to regain control of Mexico. In 1833, He became Mexico's president.
There are two of them:Spain (1810-1821), when Mexico fought its war of independence against colonial and royalist forces.France (1838) when it bullied Mexico to pay reparations to a pastry cook and again (1862-1867) when it invaded Mexico to prevent the rise of the United States as an economic power.
Mexico's independence would mean a huge loss on investment, power and prestige. Mexico alone was the largest source of silver for the Spanish Empire, producing 24 million pesos (US$ 388 million at current prices) annually, giving enough incentive to keep it as an overseas colony. Even after Mexico won its independence war against Spain in 1821, it wasn't until 1836 that Spain finally accepted its independence and ceased any attempt on retaking Mexico, as well as the rest of its territories in the Americas, save Puerto Rico and Cuba.
There are six bases of power. These include coercive power, reward power, legitimate power, expert power, referent power, and informational power.
No, power tools are cheap in Mexico.