'People power' is a global brand owned by America
The US and the western media back protests over controversial
elections when it suits them, but are silent over those in Mexico
By Mark Almond
08/15/06 "The
Guardian" -- -- A couple of years ago television,
radio and print media in the west just couldn't get enough of
"people power". In quick succession, from Georgia's rose revolution
in November 2003, via Ukraine's orange revolution a year later, to
the tulip revolution in Kyrgyzstan and the cedar revolution in
Lebanon, 24-hour news channels kept us up to date with democracy on
a roll.
Triggered by allegations of election fraud, the dominoes toppled.
The US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, was happy with the
trend: "They're doing it in many different corners of the world,
places as varied as Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan and, on the other hand,
Lebanon ... And so this is a hopeful time."
But when a million Mexicans try to jump on the people-power
bandwagon, crying foul about the July 2 presidential elections, when
protesters stage a vigil in the centre of the capital that continues
to this day, they meet a deafening silence in the global media.
Despite Mexico's long tradition of electoral fraud and polls
suggesting that Andrés Manuel López Obrador - a critic of the North
American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) - was ahead, the media
accepted the wafer-thin majority gained by the ruling party nominee,
Harvard graduate Felipe Calderón.
Although Mexico's election authorities rejected López Obrador's
demand for all 42m ballots to be recounted, the partial recount of
9% indicated numerous irregularities. But no echo of indignation has
wafted to the streets of Mexico City from western capitals.
Maybe Israel's intervention in Lebanon grabbed all the attention and
required every hack and videophone. Back in 2004 CNN and the BBC
were perfectly able to cover the battle for Falluja and the orange
revolution in the same bulletins. Today, however, even a news junkie
like me cannot remember a mainstream BBC bulletin live from among
the massive crowds in Mexico City. Faced by CNN's indifference to
the growing crisis in Mexico, only a retread of an old saying will
do: "Pity poor Mexico, so far from Israel, so close to the United
States."
Castro's failing health gets more airtime than the constitutional
crisis gripping America's southern neighbour, which is one of its
major oil suppliers. Apparently, crowds of protesters squatting in
Mexico City for weeks protesting against alleged vote-rigging don't
make a good news story. Occasionally commentators who celebrated
Ukrainians blocking the main thoroughfares of Kiev condescend to
jeer at Mexico's sore losers and complain that businessmen are
missing deadlines because dead-enders with nothing better to do are
holding up the traffic. Ukraine's Viktor Yushchenko was decisive
when he declared himself president, but isn't López Obrador a
demagogue for doing the same?
The colour-coded revolutionaries of the former Soviet Union had a
pro-western agenda - such as bringing Georgia and Ukraine into Nato
and the EU - but in Latin America radicals question the wisdom of
membership of US-led bodies such as Nafta and the WTO. The crude
truth is that Washington cannot afford to let Mexico's vast oil
reserves fall into hands of a president even half as radical as
Venezuela's Hugo Chávez.
But didn't the western observers certify the Mexican polls as
"fair", while they condemned the Ukrainian elections? True, but
election observers are not objective scientists. The EU relies on
politicians, not automatons, to evaluate polls. Take the head of its
observer mission, the MEP José Ignacio Salafranca: as a Spanish
speaker in Mexico, Salafranca had a huge advantage over many of the
MEPs in Ukraine who draped themselves in orange even while en
mission - but he is hardly neutral. His rightwing Popular party is
an ally of Calderón's Pan party, which is in power in Mexico.
Calderón was immediately congratulated by Salafranca's colleague
Antonio López-Istúriz on the "great news".
The days of leftwing fraternalism may be over, but the globalist
right has its own network, linking the Spanish conservatives,
American Republicans and Calderón's Pan party - and they provided
the key observer. To paraphrase Stalin: "It doesn't matter who
votes, it matters who observes the vote."
Salafranca has a track record as an election observer. In Lebanon's
general elections in 2005 he had no problem with the pro-western
faction sweeping the board around Beirut with fewer than a quarter
of voters taking part and nine of its seats gained without even a
token alternative candidate. "It is a feast of democracy," he
declared. His mood changed when the democratic banquet moved to
areas dominated by Hizbullah or the Christian maverick General Aoun.
Suddenly, "vote-buying" and the need for "fundamental reform" popped
up in the EU observation reports.
Unanimity on the scale seen across Lebanon suggests that the cedar
revolution - despite the hype - did nothing to promote real
democratic pluralism. Hizbullah's hold on the south is the most
controversial aspect of the sectarian segmentation of Lebanese
society, but everywhere local bosses dominate their fiefdoms as
before. Similarly, more scepticism about Ukraine's revolution would
have left people better informed than the orange boosterism that
passed for commentary 18 months ago.
But Mexico is different because it is so under-reported. The cruel
reality is that "people power" has become a global brand. But like
so many global brands it is owned by Americans. Mexicans and any
other "populists" who try to copy it should beware that they're
infringing a copyright. No matter how many protesters swarm through
Mexico City or how long they protest, it is George Bush and co who
decide which people truly represent The People. People power turns
out to be about politics, not arithmetic.
· Mark Almond is a history lecturer at Oriel College, Oxford -
mpalmond@aol.com
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