Andrés Rafael Granier Melo

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Andrés Rafael Granier Melo (b. 1948 in Villahermosa, Tabasco) is a Mexican politician affiliated to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) who in 2006 susccesfully ran for Governor of Tabasco.

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[edit] Political career

From 2000 to 2003 Andrés Granier served as municipal president (mayor) of Centro a municipality in Tabasco that has its municipal seat in Villahermosa, the capital city of the state. In 2006 he ran for the governorship of Tabasco; he won the 2006 Tabasco gubernatorial election hence he was elected to serve from 2007 to 2012.

The Coalition for the Good of All and its candidate César Raúl Ojeda himself questioned the results of the election before the Federal Electoral Tribunal, that on December 27, 2006 emitted its resolution, declaring 7 polling stations annulled, but ratifying the triumph of Granier, and to declare that the Coalition for Good of All failed to show that there were any irregularities.[1]

[edit] Trivia

When Granier was a boy he suffered an accident that forced him to use a wheelchair for several years; then, after many operations, he was able to recover the use of his legs.

[edit] References

[edit] See also

Preceded by
Manuel Andrade
Governor of Tabasco
2007-present
Succeeded by
incumbent
Current Mexican State Governors

Aguascalientes: Luis Armando Reynoso
Baja California: José Guadalupe Osuna Millán
Baja California Sur: Narciso Agúndez Montaño
Campeche: Jorge Carlos Hurtado Valdez
Chiapas: Juan Sabines Guerrero
Chihuahua: José Reyes Baeza Terrazas
Coahuila: Humberto Moreira Valdés
Colima: Silverio Cavazos
Durango: Ismael Hernández
Guanajuato: Juan Manuel Oliva Ramírez

Guerrero: Carlos Zeferino Torreblanca
Hidalgo: Miguel Osorio Chong
Jalisco: Emilio González Márquez
State of México: Enrique Peña Nieto
Michoacán: Leonel Godoy Rangel
Morelos: Marco Antonio Adame Castillo
Nayarit: Ney González Sánchez
Nuevo León: Natividad González Parás
Oaxaca: Ulises Ruiz Ortiz
Puebla: Mario Plutarco Marín Torres
Querétaro: Francisco Garrido Patrón

Quintana Roo: Félix González Canto
San Luis Potosí: Jesús Marcelo de los Santos
Sinaloa: Jesús Aguilar Padilla
Sonora: Eduardo Bours
Tabasco: Andrés Rafael Granier Melo
Tamaulipas: Eugenio Hernández Flores
Tlaxcala: Héctor Ortiz Ortiz
Veracruz: Fidel Herrera Beltrán
Yucatán: Ivonne Ortega Pacheco
Zacatecas: Amalia García

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