|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : South
& Central America
Uruguayan election: Frente Amplio wins plurality in first
round
By Bill Vann
11 November 1999
Use
this version to print
Uruguay is headed for a second round of presidential elections
November 28 following a vote at the end of last month that delivered
the largest share of the ballots to a center-left coalition known
as the Frente Amplio (Broad Front) and its presidential candidate,
Tabare Vazquez.
The election marked a historic shift in Uruguayan politics,
where the two traditional ruling parties, the "Blancos"
and "Colorados," have alternated in power since the
country gained its independence from Spain in 1823. The results
in the first round of voting October 31 already guarantee that
the Frente Amplio will represent the largest bloc in the country's
parliament, though it falls short of an absolute majority.
The country of 3.2 million people historically has had one
of the highest standards of living and most extensive social welfare
systems of any country in Latin America. These conditions have
been sharply eroded in the latter half of the twentieth century,
however. A military dictatorship which ruled the country from
1973 to 1985 massacred the most militant sections of the working
class and crushed the trade unions.
In the more recent period, the outgoing government of President
Julio Maria Sanguinetti has embarked on a series of "free
market reforms" that have driven the official unemployment
rate up to 10.5 percent and attacked social benefits upon which
the broad masses of the Uruguayan people rely. The country's ongoing
recession is expected to cut the Gross Domestic Product by up
to 2 percent this year.
Uruguay's main trade union federation, the PIT-CNT, has lost
nearly 80 percent of its membership over the course of just a
few years, while recent studies have shown that fully 40 percent
of the children in the capital city of Montevideo do not have
access to the minimum income required to provide adequate food,
shelter and clothing.
The vote represented a protest against these deteriorating
conditions. In Montevideo, the center of the Uruguayan working
class, the Frente Amplio won more than half of the votes, as it
did in the two other provincesCanelones and Maldonadowith
the largest populations.
In the second round of balloting, Vazquez will face the Colorado
Party's candidate, Jorge Batlle, who trailed him by 7 percentage
points in the first vote. Batlle has won the support of the Blanco
Party for the second round on the basis of an anticommunist campaign,
charging that Vazquez's election would inaugurate a severe economic
crisis and an investors' boycott.
Luis Alberto Lacalle, an ex-president and candidate of the
Blancos, called for a coalition between the traditional rivals
as "the true response against Marxism." He added, "There
were sectors of the Frente Amplio that supported the armed struggle.
We can see therefore that democracy requires vigilance."
The Frente Amplio, an electoral coalition joining Social Democrats,
the Stalinist Communist Party and former Tupamaro guerrillas,
has attempted to answer such charges by dispatching delegations
to the International Monetary Fund and the Wall Street banks,
assuring them that the party will not interfere with the essential
profit interests of the foreign banks and multinationals.
In the wake of the Frente Amplio's success in the first round
of voting, Vazquez spoke of carrying out a "cautious revolution,"
declaring that his government would stand for "an alternative
to the neo-liberal model, which is progressivism." The front-runner
added, "Our economic policy is absolutely gradualist, except
on two themes, the fight against corruption and against poverty."
He vowed that the Frente Amplio would introduce neither "adventures
nor magic."
Aside from promises to raise the minimum wage and reduce the
value-added tax, the Frente Amplio's proposals amount to vague
talk of discouraging "short-term" investment in favor
of channeling capital into productive enterprises. Vazquez has
denied any intention to tax bank holdings or change the bank secrecy
laws that have made Montevideo a regional financial center. Just
under half of the $11 billion in Uruguayan deposits belong to
foreigners.
Meanwhile, the country's military lost little time in expressing
its own attitude toward the election. Chief of the army, General
Fernan Amado, declared that the issue of massive human rights
violations under the former military dictatorship had been ruled
upon and closed.
The statement came in response to a declaration by Vazquez
that if he were elected his government would open up a new investigation
into what happened to the thousands who disappeared
after being detained under military rule. He described the fate
of the disappeared as an open wound on our society.
As in other Latin American countries where the military ceded
power to civilian governments, Uruguay instituted a blanket amnesty,
preventing the prosecution of the officers and soldiers who carried
out executions, torture and illegal abductions and imprisonment
under the dictatorship.
The subject of the disappeared was highlighted recently by
a public appeal from the Argentine poet, Juan Gelman, for the
government to assist him in determining the fate of his daughter-in-law,
who was abducted by the Argentine military regime and transported
to Uruguay under Operation Condor, a joint program
of repression established by the dictatorships throughout Latin
America's Southern Cone. He also asked for information about a
granddaughter who was born in captivity.
Uruguay's lame duck president Sanguinetti sent a letter to
the poet November 5, complaining bitterly that after 24
years of asking nothing of the Uruguayan authorities, you have
given me 129 days to try and help you. He went on to claim
that there was no evidence the young woman was ever brought to
Uruguay and no information had been found regarding her fate.
Naming high-ranking officers who were directly involved in
Operation Condor, Gelman in his reply demanded to know whether
Sanguinetti had asked each of them what they had done with his
daughter-in-law.
Gelman's demand has received support from intellectuals, writers
and artists from all over the world. His ordeal began in August
1976, when agents of the Argentine dictatorship raided his home.
Not finding him, they seized his children. His daughter Nora was
freed after being tortured in a clandestine prison. His son Marcelo
was never seen again. His son's wife, Maria Claudia, eight months
pregnant, also disappeared. She was last traced to Uruguay, where
she bore a daughter, whose whereabouts are likewise unknown.
Uruguay's vote follows the recent defeat of the Peronist party
in Argentina, after 10 years in which the Menem government has
carried out policies dictated by the IMF, while pegging the country's
currency directly to the dollar. As in Uruguay, these policies
have meant a sharp increase in unemployment and poverty. Also
as in Uruguay, the victors in the Argentine election have advanced
a vague program promising "social justice," while pledging
to continue the basic economic policies demanded by the international
banking institutions.
In both countries, center-left coalitions have been the beneficiaries
of mounting popular anger over deteriorating social conditions,
while offering no real program for overturning the policies imposed
by the international financial institutions and multinational
corporations and their domestic agents.
See Also:
Ecuador default, Colombia
devaluation: renewed debt and currency jitters in Latin America
[1 October 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |