Democracy, Mexican Style - Part II
Part I Here
By Stephen Lendman
07/10/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- There's much happening in Mexico in the
aftermath of the nation's most contentious election ever, but it
began many months before the first vote was cast. The popularity of
leftist opposition candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador of the
Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) scared the ruling National
Action Party (PAN) enough to get them to try to deny him the right
to run for president in the election just concluded. In April, 2005,
a commission of four members of the Chamber of Deputies (Mexico's
Congress) held there was sufficient cause to suspect Obrador
committed a crime when he ordered the construction of a service road
to a hospital ignoring a judge's order against doing it. Obrador
said he was just widening the road and stopped when he learned of
the court order. The full Chamber ignored his explanation and then
voted to strip him of his government immunity from prosecution so he
could be indicted, have to stand trial and be constitutionally
barred from holding or running for high office. The transparent
scheme didn't work because the people of Mexico wouldn't tolerate it
and turned out in mass street protests to support him.
That mass support succeeded in getting the ruling PAN to back down
from its attempt to keep Obrador off the ballot but not in the
shoddy campaign tactics they decided to use against him. Because of
his popularity, Obrador was a serious candidate who would likely win
easily in a fair election. But there's nothing fair about Mexican
politics where the notions of dirty tricks and hardball tactics
could have been invented. From early on in the campaign, the Mexican
corporate media and ruling business-friendly right wing parties
attacked Obrador viciously as an evil twin of Venezuela's Hugo
Chavez, falsely accusing him of receiving campaign funds from the
Venezuelan President and being guilty of corruption during his time
as mayor of Mexico City. The ads also accused him of being a
"danger" for Mexico. In addition, government instigated street
violence in an attempt to break a teachers strike in Oaxaca and to
disrupt events in San Salvador Atenco created tension, stoked fear
and were effectively used as political and PR tools to turn enough
of the public against Lopez Obrador to erase his once insurmountable
lead in the polls to a slim one on election day - an advantage
easily overcome with the shenanigans the ruling party had in mind to
use to assure its candidate won.
But Lopez Obrador was lucky PAN officials and their conspiratorial
Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) allies didn't intend for him
what state officials plotted and pulled off against two other noted
state adversaries in the past who paid dearly. General Emiliano
Zapata, the Mexican peasant rebel leader who supported agrarian
reform and land redistribution in the battles of the Mexican
Revolution (a Mexican Simon Bolivar), was assassinated by government
troops in 1919. Then in March, 1994, leading opposition candidate
Luis Donaldo Colosio met the same fate on the campaign trail in
Tijuana. Obrador survived the shabby scheme to keep him off the
ballot, was able to run as the opposition candidate, and only paid
the price of a defeat at the polls (so far) in an election clearly
stolen from him.
At this point Lopez Obrador is not going gentley "into that good
night." Given the clear election irregularities, he's demanded the
ballot boxes be opened and all votes be recounted manually. He has
every right to ask for that and more with what already is known
about the fraud committed against him. The preliminary vote totals
were manipulated to show PAN candidate Felipe Calderon would be the
winner, initially 3 million votes were never counted and only in
hindsight 2.5 million of them were added to the totals, 900,000
supposedly void, blank and annulled ballots were declared null,
discarded and never included in the official totals, 700,000
additional votes disappeared from missing precincts, thousands of
voters were denied their franchise in strong Obrador precincts and
much more.
In addition, it was learned that Felipe Calderon's brother-in-law
Diego Hildebrando Zavala wrote the vote-counting software, and it's
already been hacked. This new discovery is especially disturbing as
whoever controls the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) computer
systems can manipulate the vote process, control which votes get
counted, which ones don't, and what the final vote tally will be.
The opportunity and temptation for fraud was therefore in the hands
of the declared winner's close family member and ally with every
reason to believe he'd take full advantage. Why wouldn't he and the
ruling party as well given the history of Mexican elections and the
underhanded and hardball tactics the country's entrenched power
interests are known to use. They'd never be willing to give up what
they've always had an iron grip on and won't if they can get away
with their scheme. But the way to stop them is with a full,
vote-by-vote independently supervised manual recount and do it
before any cast, counted or discared votes are manipulated or
destroyed. That's the only antidote for computer fraud as well as to
be able to salvage and include in the total as many of the known
uncounted and valid discarded votes as possible. It all sounds like
Florida, 2000 deja vu all over again, but we know how that one
turned out.
Still, Lopez Obrador said he'll contest the election and demand a
full recount. If he follows through on his challenge, he'll have to
await a ruling by the Electoral Tribunal, known as Trife, which has
until September 6 to consider his case. The new president takes
office on December 1 so it's possible the electoral challenge will
succeed. In the past, Trife has reversed some local elections
including one in Obrador's home district of Tabasco in 2000, but
it's very unlikely to reverse this one given the overwhelming
pressure against it which in Mexico may include real and
intimidating physical threats officials take very seriously.
The people of Mexico may have other ideas though. As many as 500,000
Obrador supporters (the corporate media lied and reported 100,000)
held a mass protest demonstration against the announced election
outcome in Mexico City's huge Zocalo plaza on July 8 to demand a
full recount. The huge crowd chanted "No to fraud," and "You're not
alone," as Lopez Obrador announced plans for a "national march for
democracy" to begin on July 12 in each of Mexico's 300 election
districts, converging in Mexico City on July 16, again in the Zocalo.
He also accused President Fox of violating Mexican law that
stipulates a president can't endorse or campaign for a candidate
which the PAN did by running government sponsored advertisements
touting its achievements. He went on to call President Fox a
"traitor to democracy" and said the "stability of the nation" is at
risk if a full vote recount isn't taken. Mr. Obrador also told an
assembled news conference "I am going to defend our victory. This
isn't over." The people of Mexico who support him certainly hope so.
The July 2 elections were also to elect members of Mexico's Chamber
of Deputies. According to the official IFE count on July 7, the PAN
won 206 of the 500 seats, followed by For the Good of All coalition
consisting of the PRD and smaller Workers Party (PT) and Convergence
Party with 160 seats. The Alliance for Mexico comprised of the PRI
and small Green Ecological Party of Mexico (PVEM) won 121 seats. An
incomplete final count in the Senate projected the PAN with 53
seats, 38 for the PRI coalition, 36 for the PRD coalition and 1 for
PANAL.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at
www.sjlendman.blogspot.com.
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