Mexico's presidential candidates have wrapped up their campaigns with huge rallies ahead of Sunday's election. Front-runner Enrique Pena Nieto appeared in Toluca, while his nearest rival Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador addressed supporters in Mexico City.
Josefina Vazquez Mota, bidding to be the first female president, closed her campaign in Guadalajara.
Mexicans will also be voting for a new congress and several state governors in the election.
Wednesday's rallies capped a long, expensive and at times bitter election campaign, which officially began three months ago.
For Mr Pena Nieto of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and Mr Lopez Obrador of the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), it was the official end of an electoral push that dates back many more months.
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Both made their intention to run clear last year.
Josefina Vazquez Mota of the governing National Action Party (PAN) and outsider Gabriel Quadri de la Torre of the New Alliance (PANAL) joined the race more recently
Mr Pena Nieto, who has maintained a double-digit lead according to most opinion polls, addressed supporters in Toluca, capital of the State of Mexico where he is the former governor.
"My priority will be to tackle the poverty in our country at its roots," he said.
Mr Pena Nieto has presented himself as the new face of the PRI, which governed Mexico uninterrupted for 71 years before being defeated in 2000.
Economy
"We are going to win the presidency again," Mr Lopez Obrador told his supporters in Mexico City's central square, the Zocalo.
The PRD candidate, a former mayor of the capital, lost the 2006 election by less than 1%.
Ms Vazquez Mota told her supporters at a final rally in Guadalajara that Mr Pena Nieto and Mr Lopez Obrador were two faces of an old system, saying that she offered "the Mexico of the future".
If the election result is close, it could increase the likelihood of demonstrations, correspondents say.
A new student protest movement emerged during the campaign, which was overwhelmingly anti-PRI.
Their rallies have injected a degree of uncertainty into the electoral battle.
But the consensus of opinion is that it will take something very unexpected to prevent the PRI from returning to the presidency, says the BBC's Will Grant in Mexico City.
Among the key issues for voters is the drug violence that has led to more than 50,000 deaths.
But for many Mexicans, boosting economic growth is more important.
President Calderon has struggled to implement many of his planned reforms as his party, the PAN, lacks a majority in Congress.
Voters will also be electing a new senate and lower house.
Some states could also change hands as new governors are chosen, and voters in the capital will be electing a new mayor.
-BBC