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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Caribbean
Elections in Haiti, Dominican Republic reflect rising opposition
to IMF policies
By Patrick Martin
2 June 2000
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Nationwide elections held in the two countries which share
the Caribbean island of Hispaniola produced landslide victories
for parties which claimed, however demagogically, to oppose policies
of austerity and privatization dictated by the International Monetary
Fund and other Western-controlled lending agencies. Balloting
was held in the Dominican Republic May 16 and in Haiti on May
21.
The Dominican election saw the victory of the Dominican Revolutionary
Party (PRD), whose presidential candidate, Hipólito Mejía,
won 49.9 percent of the vote, compared to 26.7 percent for six-time
former president Joaquin Balaguer. Blind and 93 years of age,
Balaguer remains the leader of the Social Christian Reformist
Party. Danilo Medina of the ruling Dominican Liberation Party
(PLD) finished third with 23.4 percent of the vote.
Despite their left-sounding names, both the PRD and the PLD
are bourgeois parties which campaign with social-democratic rhetoric
in order to win votes in a country where over 60 percent of the
population lives in dire poverty. The PLD abandoned its populist
pretensions under the regime of outgoing President Leonel Fernandez,
who faithfully implemented IMF policies of opening the country
to foreign trade and investment and privatizing state-owned industries.
The result was the fastest growth rate in Latin America last
year, 8.3 percent, fueled by a huge influx of foreign investment,
which benefited only the small minority of Dominicans in the upper
crust of society. According to one press account: The rich
have grown richer, while corruption remains endemic and prostitution,
drug trafficking and illegal boat journeys to the United States
are on the rise. Especially unpopular was the outgoing government's
decision to privatize the state-run sugar and electrical power
industries. The Dominican Republic has been plagued by power blackouts,
with many families enduring outages of 12 hours a day, while electricity
bills have soared.
Fernandez was barred from seeking reelection, and his chosen
successor, Medina, reaped the harvest of popular discontent. The
PLD fell to third place, while the PRD, which held the presidency
for two terms from 1978 to 1986, came within a hair of an absolute
majority of the vote. Both Balaguer and Medina conceded after
the first round of voting, eliminating the necessity for a runoff.
Mejía campaigned on a platform of increased social spending,
aid to small farmers and a reassessment of the current
government's privatization policies. He couched all of these pledges
in the language of Dominican nationalism.
The incoming president is certain to discard this verbal radicalism.
An agronomist and businessman who was a cabinet official in the
1970s, he can be expected to quickly bow to the IMF and the US
corporate interests which dominate the Dominican economy.
The legislative election held four days later in Haiti took
place under conditions of rising social and political tension.
The Lavalas Family party of former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide
won an overwhelming victory, with a turnout estimated at 50 to
60 percent, more than 10 times the proportion of those who participated
in the last legislative elections in 1997.
According to preliminary figures released May 29 by the Electoral
Council, Lavalas won 16 of the 19 seats which were up for vote
in the Senate; one was taken by an independent, and two had not
yet been determined. In the lower House, Lavalas won 20 of 83
seats outright and was leading in another 30, with a runoff scheduled
for June 25 for all districts where no candidate won an outright
majority.
The victory in the legislative election sets the stage for
Aristide to return to power in presidential elections scheduled
for later this year. The former priest won the presidency in 1990
but was overthrown soon after in a military coup. The US government
restored him to the presidency in 1994 following American military
occupation of the island, but the Clinton administration insisted
that Aristide leave office at the end of 1995 as scheduled, despite
the loss of three years of his term to the military dictatorship.
Aristide actually profited politically from being forced to
leave office, since the austerity measures demanded by the Clinton
administration and the IMF, including privatization of state enterprises
and cuts in subsidies, were largely implemented by his successor
Rene Preval. Aristide increasingly distanced himself from these
policies, denouncing the sell-off of government-owned factories
and utilities as a windfall for the tiny elite of wealthy Haitians,
who snapped up shares in the newly privatized firms.
Preval was elected in 1995 with Aristide's support, but the
Lavalas majority in the legislature soon splintered into rival
factions, with the more overtly right-wing grouping, headed by
Gerard Pierre-Charles, finally breaking with Aristide entirely
and reconstituting itself as the Organization of People in Struggle
(OPL), while the former priest reorganized his loyalists under
the name Lavalas Family.
During Preval's five-year term, the government has been effectively
deadlocked, with Preval balancing between Aristide and his opponents,
unable to command majority support in the legislature. After failing
to win confirmation of several nominees for prime minister, Preval
finally dissolved the legislature in January 1999, pending new
elections. This vote has been postponed several times, while a
struggle ensued between supporters and opponents of Aristide,
each seeking to gain control over the electoral procedures.
US agencies, including the National Endowment for Democracy
(NED), a notorious conduit for CIA operations internationally,
in which the AFL-CIO labor bureaucracy participates, have intervened
repeatedly in an effort to steer Haitian politics in the direction
desired by Washington. The NED funds both the National Democratic
Institute (NDI), the overseas arm of the US Democratic Party,
and the International Republican Institute (IRI), the parallel
offshoot of the Republicans.
The National Democratic Institute gave financial backing to
Gerard Pierre-Charles' OPL and egged on the split in Lavalas.
Not to be outdone, the IRI organized a faction of stooges in Haiti
at a conference in early 1998 of 26 right-wing groups. These groups,
with negligible popular support, included several headed by former
officials of the Duvalier dictatorship or the military regime
of Gen. Henri Namphy, including former President Leslie Manigat,
who had been installed by the military, and Marc Bazin, former
finance minister for Jean-Claude Duvalier and the presidential
candidate defeated by Aristide in 1990. It also included the party
founded by Roger Lafontant, the late chieftain of the Tonton Macoute
death squad.
In the run-up to the May 21 vote, both wings of the NED threw
their support to a new coalition formed on the basis of opposition
to Aristide, called the Espace de Concertation (Coalition for
Concord), which included both openly right-wing elements and some
former Aristide supporters like Evans Paul, mayor of Port-au-Prince
at the time of the 1991 coup.
Paul was one of a group of Haitian exiles who brought suit
against former military dictator Prosper Avril in a US federal
court in 1994 and won a $41 million judgment against him for ordering
their torture. In advance of the elections and under the aegis
of the US government, Paul and Avril, the torture victim and the
torturer, established a political coalition.
Over the past year and a half, the Clinton administration has
made several attempts to forestall a Lavalas victory in the elections.
Anthony Lake, former national security adviser, visited the country
last year and met with the Espace de Concertation coalition leaders.
The National Endowment for Democracy paid for the election
and tried to dictate procedures that would favor the opposition.
One such measure was a requirement that all voters produce photo
IDs, which was calculated to produce a much lower turnout, since
many poor Haitians, after decades of brutal dictatorship, were
understandably reluctant to register and get photo identification
from the police.
However, when Preval postponed the election the Clinton administration
and international lending agencies cut off aid to the impoverished
nation. The White House set a June 21 deadline for Haiti to seat
a new legislature in order to obtain the release of $500 million
in loans and grants.
In the pre-election period, at least 15 people were killed
in political violence, including both supporters and opponents
of Aristide. After the May 21 vote, violent clashes erupted in
Port-au-Prince between the rival factions, and an opposition candidate
for mayor of the city, Jean-Michel Holefen, was hit in the head
by a rock and killed. Police fired tear gas to break up a melee
in downtown Port-au-Prince.
Although outside observers from the Organization of American
States described the voting as generally fair, and there was no
violence reported at the polls, the main groups opposed to Lavalas
denounced the vote as rigged and declared they would not participate
in the runoff. Several dozen candidates and supporters of these
groups were arrested the week after the election on a variety
of charges, including inciting violence against government officials
or Lavalas supporters.
Aristide's right-wing opponents in Haiti are openly banking
on further intervention by the US government against Lavalas.
They were rewarded with a statement from the US embassy in Port-au-Prince
on May 27 condemning the arrests and alleged intimidation of opposition
leaders.
Despite the widespread illusions in Lavalas and Aristide, there
is an enormous social gulf between the poverty-stricken masses
of Haiti and the pro-capitalist politicians vying for power in
Port-au-Prince. On the eve of the election, Lavalas held its final
election rally in the Cite Soleil neighborhood of the capital
city, a huge slum which is a traditional party stronghold. Only
400 people attended out of the more than 200,000 residents.
The tensions between Washington and Port-au-Prince reflect
fears in the White House and State Department that Aristide, despite
his service as an American stooge during the period of US military
occupation, is an unreliable political instrument. Their greatest
concern is that with Lavalas in control of the legislature and
Aristide returned to the presidency, a popular movement could
erupt which the former priest would be unable to control.
See Also:
US occupation force evacuates
Haiti, leaving a country in ruins
[17 February 2000]
Central
America & the Caribbean
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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