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WSWS : News
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America : Mexico
Massive protest forces end to prosecution of Mexico Citys
mayor
By Rafael Azul
3 May 2005
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Mexicos President Vicente Fox announced last Thursday
that the storm clouds had cleared in the political
crisis that has gripped the country since the government stripped
Mexico Citys Mayor Andrés Manuel Lopez Obrador of
his immunity from prosecution. The government has backed away
from the political maneuver, which had seemed almost certain to
preclude Lopez Obradors candidacy in the 2006 presidential
election.
The path is now clear, Fox told a group of business
executives. We have gotten rid of the storm clouds, we have
gotten rid of uncertainty, and we are ensuring that the electoral
process of 2006 will be one in complete accordance with the law.
The night before, the countrys attorney general in charge
of Lopez Obradors prosecution had resigned, and Fox had
called for a negotiated agreement that would allow the Mexico
City mayor to run for president in July of next year.
The uncertainty that Fox referred to was both the
threat of political upheavals in Mexico itself and the growing
nervousness on the international markets that the confrontation
would generate a protracted period of economic and social instability.
Fox told the assembled businessmen that he had decided to lift
the threat against Lopez Obrador in large part to restore investor
confidence.
Yet there is no doubt that the underlying concern was that
popular anger over the governments actions would prove uncontrollable.
On Sunday April 24, 1.2 million Mexican citizens had mobilized
in a massive March of Silence to repudiate the governments
attempt to prosecute the Mexico City mayor. The demonstrators
walked the 6 kilometers (3.5 miles) between the Archeological
Museum and the historic Zocalo Square, the citys political
center.
Workers, peasants, students and middle class people from as
far away as Oaxaca in southern Mexico participated in what was
the largest political protest ever in Mexico City. The turnout
exceeded by far the predictions of up to 300,000 made by its organizers
in Lopez Obradors Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD).
In attendance were former supporters of President Vicente Fox
and of his National Action Party (PAN) and of the Revolutionary
Institutionalist Party (PRI) as well as trade union contingents,
such as nuclear power workers, petroleum workers, electricians,
and government employees.
The PRI, created in the period following the Mexican Revolution
(1910-1917), ruled Mexico continuously for 70 years. It was defeated
in the 2000 elections by Fox and the PAN.
The march was meant to be silent; organizers distributed 200,000
face masks, symbolic of the protest. This did not prevent people
from chanting in support of Lopez Obrador and against President
Fox. Among the slogans inscribed on banners were: They did
it in Ecuador, why not in Mexico, a reference to the popular
demonstrations that forced the removal of Ecuadorian President
Lucio Gutierrez last month; Defend the right of suffrage;
and Defend Democracy. Other signs called for a massive
vote against the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and the
PAN in next years elections.
The decision by the Mexican House of Deputies to strip Lopez
Obrador of his immunity from criminal prosecution was widely seen
as a cynical ploy to prevent the Mexico City mayorwho places
first in the presidential pollsfrom running for president.
The alleged offense involved a petty dispute over land that the
city government had expropriated in order to build a public road.
While Lopez Obradors political opponents claimed he had
abused his authority and defied a court order in taking the land,
for Mexicans who have seen immense corruption by other politicians
go unpunished, the case was clearly a pretext.
The action sparked protests across the country, with demonstrators
dogging President Fox wherever he went, including Guadalajara,
Mexicos third largest city, generally considered a PAN stronghold.
Polls indicate that 65 percent of the public disapproved of Foxs
handling of the matter.
The Fox administration vacillated in the days following the
March of Silence, but finally caved in. On Monday, April 25, Foxs
press secretary Ruben Aguilar denounced Lopez for disregarding
the House of Deputies decision and going back to work as
Mexico City mayor. I will simply say that we consider this
a provocation and a violation of the law, declared Aguilar.
Aguilar downplayed the March of Silence and insisted that it would
not affect Lopez Obradors indictment. Yet he indicated that
the government was open to a compromise solution, based on negotiations
between government authorities and the mayor.
In answer to a reporters question, Aguilar categorically
denied that the government was pressing for the resignation of
the nations Attorney General, Rafael Macedo, for supposed
procedural errors in preparing an indictment against Lopez Obrador.
Toward the end of the week, Emilio Chuayfett, of the PRI, who
led the impeachment effort in the House of Deputies, advised legislators
that the vote by the lower house did not include removing Lopez
from office. This interpretation was in marked contrast to what
was actually said during the debate on April 7, when PRI members
insisted that Lopez had been removed from office. While defending
the vote as impeccable, Chuayfett called for reversing
that decision.
On the day before the march, former PRI President Humberto
Roque warned of divisions within the military on the Lopez Obrador
crisis. In an interview with the Mexican daily La Jornada,
he denounced attempts by Fox to use the army to interfere with
the protests, comparing it to what President Diaz Ordaz had done
in 1968, when soldiers were called out to massacre students in
Tlatelolco Square.
The Secretary of National Defense Gerardo Vega vehemently denied
Roques charge the following day. According to Vega, Fox
ordered the military to stay out of the streets. Less than one
year ago, on June 2004, retired officers within the School of
Cadets let it be known that they were ready to intervene on Foxs
behalf, and called for a him to apply a heavy hand, if necessary.
Clearly the depth of popular support for Lopez and revulsion
over the political maneuvers to deprive Mexican voters of the
right to vote for the PRD candidate forced Fox, the PAN and the
PRI to back down. Their fear that the crisis could yield a social
explosion is based not merely on the latest political events,
but on the profound changes within Mexican society over two decades.
Since the 1980s, there has been a huge social polarization
between Mexicos capitalist class and the workers. Mexico
boasts some of the richest men in Latin America, billionaires
who acquired enormous wealth thanks to their political connections
and links to foreign capital. While a handful of Mexican billionaires
make the Fortune 500 list each year, some 30 million Mexicans
have virtually nothing, earning less than the US $135 a month
necessary to buy the Basic Indispensable Breadbasket (CBI,) a
minimal level of consumption by Mexican standards. In 1980, the
CBI was the equivalent of a minimum wage. In todays prices,
a minimum wage only buys 28 percent of a CBI. Over 30 percent
of Mexicos workers earn less than two minimum wages. Many
are forced to work two, sometimes three, jobs. The buying power
of industrial wages is now 70 percent of what it was in 1976.
The situation is far worse outside of the main industrial centers.
Out of the impoverished southern states of Michoacan, Guerrero,
Oaxaca, a steady stream of migrants inundates Mexico City; many
others cross the border into the United States. The mobility of
capital in the global economy makes it possible for the wealthy
to protect their assets simply by transferring them to another
country. No such easy options are available to workers and peasants,
many of whom fall pray to smugglers and get sick or die trying
to cross the US-Mexico border.
The flight of peasants into the large cities, the growth of
maquiladoraexport oriented sweatshopsand
the integration of industry into the global economy have transformed
the Mexican working class. A section of workers, still somewhat
protected by corporatist arrangements between the PRI-controlled
union bureaucracy and the government (such as oil workers, public
employees, sugar workers, and utility workers), has managed to
cling to a modicum of job security, pensions and stable wages
set by union contracts.
The rest of the working class, directly tied to the global
market, faces conditions of virtually no job security, of variable
wages and working conditions based on the profit needs of corporations,
with minimal benefits, and little chance of a decent retirement.
In many cases wage increases have been replaced with productivity
bonuses. While factories such as the Ford Motors assembly plant
in Hermosillo, Mexico rank among the most productive in the world,
wages average less than three dollars an hour. French economist
Alain Lipietz reports that, instead of higher wages, high-performance
workers at the plant are typically rewarded with trinkets such
as tape recorders and radios.
At the rally that capped the March of Silence, Lopez Obrador
declared that his Alternate Program for the Nation puts poor people
first and called for a commitment by all social classes to return
to a welfare state, organized by the federal Government in the
context of the global economy. Obradors populist program
is based on the illusion that somehow a return to the conditions
that existed prior to 1982 and the onset of the Mexican debt crisis
is possible.
Behind the empty promises of a revival of economic nationalism,
Lopez Obrador and the PRD are themselves quite conscious that
the country is turning into a social powder keg. The silent
character of the march is indicative of the cautiousness with
which they attempted to mobilize support, while discouraging the
voicing of demands that they have no intention of meeting.
See Also:
Impeachment of Mexico City
mayor sparks political crisis
[18 April 2005]
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