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Mexicos political crises intensifies after Calderón
is certified as president
By Rafael Azul
11 September 2006
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On Tuesday, September 5, Mexicos Federal Judicial Elections
Tribunal (TEPJF) declared Felipe Calderón Hinojosa the
winner of the July 2 presidential election. The decision has only
inflamed the ongoing political crisis, under conditions in which
Mexican society is deeply polarized and class relations are at
a breaking point. Calderón is a member of the National
Action Party (PAN).
The TEPJF indicated that even though it found serious irregularities
in the manner in which the elections were conducted, they were
not serious enough to change the results of the vote, which it
said favored Calderón over Andrés Manuel López
Obrador, of the nationalist populist Party of the Democratic Revolution
(PRD). The reported margin of victory was just 240,000 votes out
of 41 million cast, a difference of 0.56 percent.
The court was unable to give a clear and unambiguous answer
to who actually won the popular vote. In a ruling that singled
out the Federal Elections Institute for procedures that facilitated
fraud, the seven-member TEPJF simply indicated that it did not
have enough information to confirm that, absent the many irregularities,
the outcome would have been different. The tribunal also singled
out President Vicente Fox and Mexican corporate interests for
engaging in practices that were unjust and a source of concern
to manipulate the vote. It added, however, that it considered
these practices to be isolated events with no determining
effect on the results of the vote.
The finding was immediately welcomed by the PAN, which downplayed
the TEPJFs criticisms. Also indifferent to the TEPJFs
language were US President George Bush, Latin American leadersincluding
Argentinas Nestor Kirchner and Chiles Socialist Party
President Michelle Bacheletand Paul Wolfowitz of the World
Bank. Calderón reported that he spoke at length with Bush
on the issue of immigration. Wolfowitz advised the Mexican government
to attend to the needs of the poor, but without taxing the rich;
instead he recommended an acceleration of the neo-liberal policies
that have been responsible for Mexicos social and economic
crisis.
The Institutionalist Revolutionary Party (PRI), the party that
ruled Mexico uninterruptedly from 1929 to 2000, accepted the decision.
PRI spokesperson Carlos Jimenez Macías declared that the
TEJPFs ruling left a foul taste in ones mouth,
but we will go along with it. PRI congressional leader Malio
Fabio Beltrones expressed dissatisfaction with the lack of fairness
of the July 2 elections and called for legislation to prevent
corporate interests from manipulating the vote.
PRD leaders indicated that they would appeal to human rights
organizations in Europe, Asia and Latin America. Typical of the
PRD response was the statement by Senator Ricardo Monreal that
this finding deepens the political crisis; the opposition
and hatred that it engenders will feed repudiation and distrust....
In the same manner that nobody governs for long sitting on bayonets,
nobody can last on the basis of a failed judicial decision.
Questions were raised about the legitimacy of the TEJPF itself.
Porfirio Muñoz Ledo, a former PRI official and ambassador
to the UN, who also served as ambassador to the European Union
for Fox, charged that President Fox had met with the members of
the TEJPF and pressured them to certify Calderón, on the
grounds that any other decision would result in a political and
economic catastrophe in Mexico. Government officials denounced
Muñoz as a liar; but the politiciannow a López
supporterinsists that he has good evidence from the court
itself that the meeting took place.
Further suspicion was cast on the entire election when the
Federal Elections Institute announced that it would deny Mexico
Citys prestigious political journal El Proceso access
to the ballots, and instead would move to destroy them.
Popular hostility to Calderón is evident wherever he
goes. During a visit to Morelia, capital of Michoacan State, he
was hounded by López Obrador supporters who prevented him
from speaking at several events. Michoacan is a PRD stronghold
whose governor Cuahutemoc Cárdenas Bartlett, accepted the
TEJPFs decision.
Meanwhile, López Obrador is campaigning to convene a
National Convention in Mexico Citys Zocalo Square on September
16. Hundreds of thousands of delegates from across Mexico are
expected to attend and declare López the winner of the
elections. In response to the TEPJF ruling, the PRD candidate
urged his followers to build the National Convention and said
that he still considers Calderón a usurper,
the product of a coup détat. López
also predicted that the new government would implode from internal
conflicts within the PAN itself, driven by the fight for positions
within the new administration.
On September 7, López listed proposals that he will
ask the convention to a approve; these include as-yet-unspecified
changes to the presidential system, the protection of the poor,
the protection of Mexicos national industries, and the struggle
against corruption.
Prospect of two presidencies in socially polarized
Mexico
The refusal of the López Obrador camp to recognize Calderóns
legitimacy and the threat that two rival presidencies will emerge
is unprecedented in modern Mexican history and can only be understood
in the context of profound social polarization, characterized
by a 30-year decline in living standards for large layers of the
working class and peasantry.
The chronic decay of living standards and the destruction of
social programs is a byproduct of the privatization of Mexican
industry. Beginning in the late 1970s, under pressure from an
increasingly globalized economy, successive governments abandoned
the import-substitution model of development and scrapped the
social compact between the working class, the peasantry and the
bourgeoisie that had been constructed by the generals that created
the PRI and stabilized Mexico in the 1920s and 1930s.
Globally mobile capital demanded that the dismantling of Mexicos
national industries go hand-in-hand with what can only be described
as a savage assault on social programs. In reaction to a series
of financial crises, funds were siphoned off from the poor to
the international financial institutions and Mexican banks. The
recipe was always the same with each change of government: cuts
in social programs were combined with the sale of state enterprises
to domestic and foreign capitalists, followed by capital flight,
devaluations of the peso, and interest rate hikes, followed by
another round of cuts in social programs and privatizations.
The reforms that ended the social compact exacted a huge social
cost, from which workers and peasants have never recovered. The
social rights that had been guaranteed by the Mexican
constitution are now largely ignored. Living standards have plummeted
for millions, while a tiny elite enjoys great wealth. An explosion
in direct investment since 1994Mexico is the third largest
recipient of US investments behind China and Brazilhas had
an uneven impact on this country of 100 million people, beneficial
to the export-oriented north, disastrous for the agricultural
south.
Of the nations 44 million workers, only 22 million are
employed in the formal sector, working regular jobs
with a modicum of job protection and decent wages. Approximately
9 million are working in the United States. The rest are either
unemployed or employed in the so-called informal sector, at very
low wages and with no legal rights. At the same time, Mexicos
agricultural sector is reeling from the countrys integration
into the North American economy. Fifteen million corn producers
on small and medium farms, unable to compete with cheaper US corn,
are being driven out of the fields and into the cities, adding
to the millions of unemployed.
In northern Mexico and around Mexico City, Guadalajara and
Monterrey, new industries have sprung up to better exploit cheap
labor, recruiting new layers of young workers in sectors such
as auto, electronic products, and machine goods. Marginalized
from the PRI and the corporatist trade unions, these layers have
yet to find their political expression as an independent force.
Social conflict is already escalating. In Oaxaca, what began
as a struggle by teachers over wages has become a political struggle.
Striking teachers and their supporters have occupied the center
of the city, government offices and radio stations, demanding
that Governor Ulises Ruiz, a corrupt PRI politician, responsible
for the repression and killing of protesting teachers last June,
resign and new elections take place. Other militant struggles
have broken out among steel workers in Michoacan and the copper
miners in Sonora. Increasingly, they can no longer be contained
by the traditional, state-endorsed unions.
López Obrador insists to his supporters that they hold
the moral high ground and that the National Democratic
Assembly will prevail as Mexicos genuine government. His
intransigent stand is consistent with a strategy to channel the
explosive social discontent expressed in the Oaxaca rebellion
through new institutions that would both insure profits and allow
for a minimum of social welfare.
López Obradors program of modest concessions to
the poor is based on sensitivity to the de-stabilizing consequences
of the social and economic policies promoted by both Calderóns
PAN and the PRI since the late 1970s. He is representative of
dissident and more farsighted groups within the ruling elite that
view with alarm the potential for the instability implicit in
this social and economic crisis plunging the nation into revolutionary
struggles, threatening capitalism itself.
In contrast, the Harvard-educated Calderón follows the
model favored by the United States and world financial institutions,
such as the World Bank, for whom the profit needs of transnational
capital are primary. These institutions demand policies that guarantee
profits, including the use of force to repress the struggles of
workers and farmers. The real question, however, is whether Calderón
will be able to govern at all, let alone complete his six-year
term.
For his part, López Obrador is playing the role of sorcerers
apprentice, attempting to mobilize and control powerful social
forces, driven by long pent-up demands for jobs, a genuine land
reform, an equitable distribution of income and wealth, and decent
living standards, including health and education and retirementdemands
that cannot be fulfilled outside of a direct revolutionary challenge
to Mexican and global capitalism.
See Also:
Mexico: President Fox puts legislature
under siege
[4 September 2006]
Mexico's election tribunal
denies Lopéz Obrador's challenge to July vote
[29 August 2006]
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