A stage in a northern Mexican city where a presidential candidate was campaigning for a local candidate collapsed after a gust of wind blew through on Wednesday night, leaving at least six people dead and at least 56 others injured, the city’s mayor said.
The stage collapsed in San Pedro Garza García, a suburb of Monterrey in the state of Nuevo León, during an event attended by the progressive candidate Jorge Álvarez Máynez and other members of the Citizens’ Movement party. The collapse was caused by strong wind, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico said on social media.
Miguel Treviño, the mayor, announced the deaths and injuries in a video, adding that all of those injured had been taken to hospitals.
The stage, which had been erected on a baseball field, was the site of a campaign event for the Citizens’ Movement party’s candidate for the city’s mayoral election, Lorenia Canavati. The party said that it had canceled all of its candidates’ scheduled events for Thursday after “hurricane-like winds” knocked down the stage.
Mr. Álvarez Máynez said on social media that he was “fine” after the collapse and that he had been communicating with the state authorities to determine what had happened. Ms. Canavati said that her team was coordinating with the authorities to support the victims.
Mexico’s meteorological service said on Wednesday evening that wind gusts of up to about 43 miles per hour were expected in the country’s northeast and that tornadoes were possible in Nuevo León and nearby states.
Samuel García, the governor of Nuevo León, said in a video message that people should take cover from the storm.
“We’re witnessing electric storms. Very strong winds and heavy rain is expected for the next two hours,” he said. “There’s already been a tragedy.”
People across Mexico will cast ballots for the presidency and more than 20,000 local, state and congressional posts on June 2.
Citizens’ Movement, a center-left party founded in 1999, is represented in this year’s general election by Mr. Álvarez Máynez, who has pitched himself as a third-party alternative to the front-runner, Claudia Sheinbaum of the ruling Morena party’s coalition, and the opposition’s Xóchitl Gálvez.
Victoria Kim and Natalie Kitroeff contributed reporting.