This is Trump’s nightmare.
I'm writing minutes after the victory of the Bernie Sanders of Mexico, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. Everyone calls him, “AMLO.” This is actually AMLO’s re-election: He first won the presidency in 2006. But back then the thieving, scheming, blood-stained criminal gang that rules Mexico (and I’m being polite), declared AMLO’s dissolute opponent the winner.
In 2006, rather than concede to vote thievery, lick his wounds and toddle off on a book tour, AMLO took his supporters into the streets, raised hell, blocked the capital’s central square for months, held a People’s Inaugural, and vowed to never, ever concede.
And tonight, twelve years later, AMLO has won a crushing, too-big-to-steal victory in Mexico’s presidential election.
And while the Good and Great told him he’d be finished if he kept protesting the stolen election, he made counting every vote the very first of his five-point campaign platform. He understands that even those with empty stomachs also hunger for democracy.
And there’s a lesson here. Are you listening, Al Gore? Mr. Kerry and Mrs. Clinton?
Bernie or Hugo?
And AMLO gave the people something to vote for. The rest of his platform included expanding free college education, raising the minimum wage, fighting income inequality and creating a massive infrastructure-fixing jobs program.
If that sounds like Bernie Sanders, that’s no accident. AMLO, like Bernie, said he is taking his program from that great Mexican hero, Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Nevertheless, Mexican media blared apoplectic prophesies that AMLO would be the Second Coming of Hugo Chavez, with mass nationalizations to follow. (The hysteria was parroted in the New York Times, not coincidentally, owned by Mexico’s richest man.)
I can tell you, AMLO is way more Bernie Sanders than Hugo Chavez (and I’ve known all three).
Both AMLO and Sanders were mayors who ran their cities as what I’d call, “Pothole Populists.” It’s get-the-job-done socialism with the emphasis on social not -ism.
AMLO proved he could tamp down corruption, keep a stingy hold on budgets while increasing pensions and providing education grants. Mayor AMLO, unlike a certain Mr. Trump, completed major city infrastructure projects—all out of the savings from cutting waste and corruption.
But unlike Bernie, who did his good works in the mean streets of Burlington, Vermont, AMLO worked nothing less than a miracle in Mexico City, which is bigger than New York and ten times as ungovernable.
(And like Bernie, AMLO is a working class kid who worked in the social movement trenches: Sanders as a SNCC organizer in Chicago, while Lopez Obrador spent six years living with, sharing the lives of and fighting for the poorest Mayan families.)
But they are stealing it right now
Let’s not get carried away with our democracy high. This election is being stolen as I write.
Not the presidency. AMLO’s poll lead of 52% to 25% for his nearest competitor, is just too much to steal. But every seat of the Mexican Congress is up for grabs, and the Powers that Be, the laughably named Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and the right-wing National Action Party (PAN) are fighting for their lives – and sometimes they fight with bullets.
So, far, 132 officials and candidates have been murdered in this election cycle. I spoke with voting rights activist (and movie star) Yareli Arizmendi in Mexico City, who told me that the old guard politicians were tied up with the Zetas and other drug gangs.
In all fairness, I should note that many victims were not just AMLO allies but also PRI, Green Party and independents who challenged the control of their cities and states by narco-traficantes.
Indeed, AMLO’s campaign gained fuel when, in 2014, the public learned of the disappearance of 43 students (and 3 investigating journalists). Evidence now indicates they were hacked to pieces and dissolved in acid by the Guerreros Unidos gang – on orders from a politician connected to the ruling party.
Arizmendi reports that ballots have been burnt in gang- and ruling-party controlled districts. She sent me a video of a woman pre-marking a stack of ballots.
I saw this game up close in 2006 when I was sent by the Guardian and Democracy Now to investigate AMLO’s shock loss by just half a percent of the vote.
On election night, AMLO was way ahead when the official count was halted—then resumed with a massive reversal in the final count. Our investigators found massive ballot-box stuffing, ballot box dumping and intimidation of voters at gunpoint. There were games with electoral rolls apparently orchestrated by the Bush Administration which, I found, had used the same company that helped Katherine Harris rig the 2000 election in Florida, ChoicePoint, to steal Mexico’s entire voter roll! (Watch this Democracy Now! report, "Florida con Salsa," from Mexico City.)
And this time, the incumbent PRI hired Cambridge Analytica. Trump’s social-media manipulators and data thieves were paid $7.2 million on their promise—I can’t make this up—to repeat a Mexican variant of their “Corrupt Hillary” campaign to smear AMLO.
It was a hard sell, especially as the wife of the current President, PRI man Enrique Peña Nieto, was caught taking a $7 million condo from a government contractor.
As I write, it looks like AMLO has crushed the second-highest candidate vote two-to-one and swept the House of Deputies. However, his coalition of parties is, as of the moment, showing poorly in the Senate race, way below pre-election polling data.
AMLO: Arrest Trump
Mexicans have had enough of the Trump-ito grifters who have held the Mexican presidency, usually by theft, for decades.
President Peña Nieto made his nation cringe with his invitation to Trump during the US Presidential campaign, boosting Trump’s candidacy. And he’s not had much to say about the caging of children on the border.
Although Trump’s child prisoners and their families detained at the border are not Mexican citizens (most come from Central America), AMLO has called for Trump’s arrest for the kidnappings as violating international law.
That’s just one indication AMLO’s victory is Trump’s nightmare. AMLO has shown he is not afraid of privileged pricks, even if they try to make themselves look fierce by staining themselves orange.
NAFTA
Weirdly, Lopez Obrador has also been called “The Trump of Mexico,” simply because they both speak to the desperation of their nation’s working classes. And both have few good words for NAFTA.
But Trump’s act, the billionaire turned class warrior, was always a fake. AMLO is for real.
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross has demanded that Mexico raise the wages of all auto workers so that the US can better compete within NAFTA.
AMLO is calling Trump’s bluff: he said, “yes” – which may come as a shock to Secretary Ross… Ross owns eight of those auto factories.
Hope and Danger
The slogan of AMLO’s coalition is, Juntos Haremos Historia. Together, we’ll make history. But history has a way of bleeding to death in Mexico.
In March 1994, Luis Donaldo Colosio was on the cusp of winning Mexico’s presidency. But his political turn to the Left infuriated his PRI bosses. At a public rally where he supposedly had government protection, one assassin, and possibly a second, put two bullets in his head.
6 comments:
“The rest of Obrador’s platform included expanding free college education, raising the minimum wage, fighting income inequality and creating a massive infrastructure-fixing jobs program.”
Great, but how will Mexico pay for it?
By creating the money out of thin air.
But who will do the work?
How about Mexico’s 123.6 million people, who instead of dying in poverty, or dying from the drug trade, can be gainfully employed?
Even if Obrador turns out to be another Obama, his election has shown average Mexicans that change is at least possible. Obrador will not transform Mexico, but at least a step has been made in that direction.
Obrador, aged 65, has been involved in politics for decades. He knows how the game is played, and he has made many tactical retreats (which are not to be confused with sell-outs.)
“Mexican media blared apoplectic prophesies that AMLO would be the Second Coming of Hugo Chavez, with mass nationalizations to follow. (The hysteria was parroted in the New York Times, not coincidentally, owned by Mexico’s richest man.)
This is to be expected. All the Mexican corporate media outlets are pro-neoliberalism (except for La Journada). Indeed, all the corporate media outlets throughout Latin America are pro-neoliberalism.
Incidentally Carlos Slim (Mexico’s richest man) had only a 17% stake in The New York Times, and he sold half of that in April 2018.
“I spoke with voting rights activist (and movie star) Yareli Arizmendi in Mexico City, who told me that the old guard politicians were tied up with the Zetas and other drug gangs.”
Politicians and bankers are the biggest drug dealers in Mexico and the USA. When they attack particular drug cartels, they do it to eliminate private competitors. Then the drug-lord politicians pose for the cameras as saints who have "rid Mexico of the drug scourge."
“Many victims were not just AMLO allies but also PRI, Green Party and independents who challenged the control of their cities and states by narco-traficantes.”
Until NAFTA, the narco-traficantes were the main benefactors of local communities. They used their money to build roads, schools, and hospitals for their people. Federal politicians ended this when they entered the game. They used the Mexican military to take control of the drug trade.
It’s been war ever since.
Whenever there is an earthquake in Mexico, or a hurricane, or a landslide, or some other natural disaster, celebrities offer to pay for relief and reconstruction, but politicians checkmate this. Politicians want average people to grovel to politicians. Politicians want to keep average people impoverished and dependent, so that they fall to the knees and treat politicians as gods.
“It was a hard sell, especially as the wife of the current President, PRI man Enrique Peña Nieto, was caught taking a $7 million condo from a government contractor.”
Ah yes. Angélica Rivera Hurtado. Pretty girl. Former soap opera star. Corporate media outlets affectionately call her “La Gaviota” (the seagull). She’s as corrupt as they come.
FM is a fiscal hawk:
“He reined in expenditures then, and the increase in the city’s level of indebtedness in real terms during his boss’s term was 3.3 percent, compared with the previous administration’s 19 percent,
Urzua himself was quick to tell investors on Monday that he intended to remain fiscally disciplined, to respect the autonomy of the country’s central bank and its floating exchange rate regime.“
https://twitter.com/markets/status/1013835479266013188?s=21
Doesn’t look good ...
Mexico does anything useful for its people and we'll label them a terrorist threat and bomb them back to the stone age. They've got a lot of oil ...
Bernie is toast. A couple of good talking points, a lot of big holes (nothing about "defense" or perpetual war), and then full capitulation. He sold his soul to the Clinton Dynasty and her corrupt Democratic Party Machine.
When Lopez Obrador was mayor of Mexico City (2000-2003) Carlos Urzua was his finance manager. Urzua reduced the growth in city debt, which is a good thing, since cities are revenue-constrained.
Now with Obrador's win, however, Urzua will be finance manager of a government that is not revenue-constrained.
Neoliberals are worried. What if Urzua helps Obrador reduce poverty? What if Urzua increases the general happiness of average Mexicans? What if Urzua makes Mexico a bit less like hell?
This keeps neoliberals awake at night. Our hell is their heaven.
“Urzua was quick to tell investors on Monday that he intended to remain fiscally disciplined, to respect the autonomy of the country’s central bank and its floating exchange rate regime.”
Was Urzua being truthful, or did he just say this to prevent a neoliberal attack by the Mexican congress? We may not know the answer until after December when Urzua takes office.
Let’s keep in mind that this entire planet runs on the LIE that monetarily sovereign governments (like Mexico’s) run on loans and tax revenue. If a politician exposes this LIE, then the loudest protests will come not from the rich elitists, but from the masses themselves, who have been told the LIE from birth, and who have based their entire lives on this LIE.
No politician can simply speak the truth. The peasants will not have it. Instead, a politician must continue to give lip service to the LIE while he does whatever he plans to do.
Ronald Reagan continually repeated the LIE while massively increasing the federal deficit in order to throw money at the Military Industrial Complex. Reagan said one thing, but did another. This is necessary in politics, since the peasants insist on being lied to. It makes their lives feel predictable and “safe.”
W. Bush’s first Treasury Secretary was Paul Henry O'Neill. When Bush told O'Neill about the plan to increase federal spending for Bush’s upcoming “war OF terror,” O'Neill strenuously objected, since O’Neill believed the LIE that the U.S. government ran on loans and on tax revenue. Bush and O’Neill went round and round on this. Cheney told O’Neill that “Reagan proved that deficits don’t matter.” Nonetheless, O’Neill continued to complain.
After about a year, O’Neill went on the talk show circuit and started announcing that Bush’s policies would “bankrupt” the U.S. government. In response, Bush fired O’Neill and replaced him with John William Snow. During Bush’s second term, he replaced Snow with Henry Paulson, who embarked on a series of Wall Street bailouts.
The point is that we still don’t know what Carlos Urzua will actually do. The neoliberals don’t either, and they are worried.
At this point Urzua is just repeating the LIE.
Excellent reporting by Greg Palast, as usual. Thanks for posting it.
Yes, I was looking for a leftist perspective on Obrador. The NBC Nightly News show I watched referred to him as Mexico's Trump, or something to that effect. I see that the both inherited hotel chains. Oh wait,
"like Bernie, AMLO is a working class kid who worked in the social movement trenches: Sanders as a SNCC organizer in Chicago, while López Obrador spent six years living with, sharing the lives of and fighting for the poorest Mayan families."
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