TEPATEPEC, Mexico — She sold snacks in a small town in central Mexico as a girl and rose to national politics with a biography that could help take her to the heights of power, she hoped.
But polls are showing Xóchitl Gálvez trailing the ruling party's candidate in the June 2 election. A recent visit to the streets of her hometown showed why, and revealed something about the priorities of today's Mexican voters.
People in Tepatepec are less interested in Gálvez's life story than their own difficult lives. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador's Morena party has been able to ease those lives with social programs. And that's helped his protégé Claudia Sheinbaum.
When Gálvez entered the presidential race, many of López Obrador's adversaries felt that she embodied their hopes of taking power. She represents a coalition that includes the PRI, which governed Mexico for 71 years, and she began her campaign as a political phenomenon backed by the country's business elites. But her popularity has been declining.
It's gotten to the point where some residents of her own hometown of 20,000 people in central Mexico are questioning Gálvez's own autobiography, which began in a modest adobe home here.
''It's not true that she was poor,'' said María del Socorro Mendoza, who was selling vegetables in a market. "Her father was a teacher and her family was one of the ones that lives well here.''
Relatives told The Associated Press that Gálvez's father was alcoholic and spent his money on drink. His 8-year-old daughter Xóchitl had to sell tamales and other snacks in the street to help her family, remembered Tepatepec resident María de los Ángeles Acevedo, 64.
The likely next president of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum, is a globally recognized scientist born in the capital. Gálvez, 61, rebelled and left the town at 16 to study computer engineering in Mexico City and while Gálvez's father Heladio had a job as a teacher, the family of seven struggled financially because he spent all his money on alcohol before dying of a terminal illness in 2003, said her cousin, Ramón Gálvez, 65.