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Mexico: President Fox puts legislature under siege
By Rafael Azul
4 September 2006
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Mexican President Vicente Fox had to cancel his final state
of the union speech before the countrys Congress September
1, after legislators protested a massive police/military mobilization
against anti-government demonstrators by seizing the podium. This
is the first time in modern Mexican history that a sitting president
has been prevented from addressing the opening session of the
legislature on September 1.
Fox provoked the conflict by ordering the deployment of thousands
of troops to block a demonstration by supporters of Andres Manuel
Lopez Obrador, the presidential candidate of the Party of the
Democratic Revolution (PRD), who was declared the loser in the
July 2 vote by a narrow margin of 240,000 votes.
The PRD candidate has rejected preliminary rulings of the federal
election tribunal in favor of Felipe Calderon, the candidate of
Foxs conservative National Action Party (PAN). The tribunal
is expected to declare Calderon the victor officially on September
6, clearing the way for his inauguration as Foxs successor
December 1.
The military occupation, unprecedented in modern Mexican history,
opens up a dangerous stage in Mexicos political and social
crisis. The PAN government, through this measure, delivered a
message to Lopez Obrador to give up his demands for a recount
and accept the decision to declare Calderón the president-elect.
This security operation represents a serious warning to the Mexican
working class of the governments intentions to repress economic
and social struggles.
A no-fly zone for helicopters was imposed over a twelve mile
radius from the Legislature at San Lázaro Square in Mexico
City, where the Congress building is located, preventing them
from flying over San Lázaro, the presidents mansion,
and the El Zocalo square. The no-fly zone lasted 23 hours, from
10 a.m. on Friday to 9 a.m. on Saturday.
All the streets leading into San Lázaro were closed
with police barricades manned by 2,840 members of the Preventive
Federal Police, 800 troops from the Presidential Corps, and 200
from the Group for Special Operations. These forces were armed
with 40 anti-riot tanks, equipped with water cannons. Caged dogs
were brought in. All those entering the security zone, including
legislators, were stopped by canine units that inspected the underside
of cars with mirrors.
More barricades were stationed in the vicinity of the Zocalo
square, where demonstrators were assembling to march on San Lázaro
as part of the mobilizations to protest the pro-Calderon election
rulings. Given the massive show of force by army and police and
in order to avert a potential bloodbathas tens of thousands
of demonstrators marched against the army barricadesthe
Lopez Obrador camp cancelled the march.
The police/military operation caused an explosion among the
congressional delegates from the opposition parties. A few minutes
before the speech was to begin, scores of legislators from the
Party of the Democratic Revolution and its coalition partner,
the Workers Party (PT), took over the podium, demanding that the
security forces be removed. The legislators refereed to article
29 of the Mexican constitution, which guarantees the peoples
right to protest.
At that point, President Fox announced that he would not address
the legislature. Instead, he handed in his report to the nation
and left. Two hours later, at 9 p.m., he delivered a taped version
of his speech in which he declared that Mexico was a stable democracy
and on the road to solving many of its social problems. He emphasized
low inflation, stable and low interest rates, and a balanced budget
that has led to a wave of home buying and the expansion of consumer
credit.
Without mentioning either Lopez Obrador or his opponent Felipe
Calderon, Fox defended the results of the election, declaring
them transparent, and called on every segment of Mexican
society to put aside partisan differences and work toward a greater
Mexico. His speech had clearly been prepared in advance, in anticipation
of a protest, since it was broadcast interlaced with pre-recorded
and emotive images such as well-groomed, happy children in school,
workers drilling for oil, and children waving Mexican flags.
President Fox declined to explain in his speech what had led
him to call for such a massive presence of police and army troops.
Despite their huge size, demonstrations of Lopez Obrador supporters
have been peaceful. There was no reason to believe that this one
would be different. The military/police provocation was a signal
to Lopez and the PRD to end their protests, accept Calderons
victory and either negotiate an accommodation with the regime
or face state repression.
Instead, the mobilization of repressive forces produced an
angry reaction inside the legislature. PRD legislators, holding
signs saying Fox Traitor, and denouncing the president
for his dictatorial measures, refused to leave the podium. Following
the event, PAN leaders threatened to push for the decertification
of the PRD as a political party. Felipe Calderón and the
PAN leaders have made it clear that a similar disruption will
not be tolerated during Calderóns swearing-in at
the same location on December 1.
The conflict between the PAN and PRD over the result of the
July 2 elections takes place in the context of rising popular
opposition and growing social discontent. The cost of stability
and low interest rates for a better-off segment of the Mexican
population, has been the economic marginalization of millions
of others. In his speech Fox did not mention that a tiny minority,
associated with transnational financial and industrial capital,
has become fabulously wealthy. In passing, toward the end of the
speech, he barely acknowledged conditions of massive unemployment
and underemployment that push hundreds of thousands every year
into the underground economy and to emigrate to the United States.
Fox also ignored the events in Oaxaca State, where thousands
of striking teachers and their supporters have occupied the center
of town and are demanding the resignation of Ulyses Ruiz, the
corrupt state governor and a member of the Institutionalist Revolutionary
Party (PRI). The Oaxaca conflict, now on its fourth month, is
on the brink of armed conflict. At least two demonstrators were
killed in June and many more were injured when police attempted
to clear out strikers from the center of town. One other was killed
August 10 at a march. Vigilante and police elements destroyed
a TV station used by strikers to explain their struggle and broadcast
their demands.
Only a few hours before the September 1 events in Mexico City,
a leader of the teachers union in Oaxaca was pistol-whipped by
vigilante elements supporting the governor.
There is every reason to assume that the military mobilization
in Mexico City had been endorsed by the Bush White House. Despite
its concerns in the Middle East, the US government has not forgotten
Mexico. A column by Greg Palast, investigative reporter for the
British newspaper Guardian, reported that the Calderón
camp received campaign advice and tactical support from the International
Republican Institute (IRI), a sinister organization created in
the 1980s as part of Washingtons support of repressive regimes
in Central America. The IRI has also been linked to the attempted
coup against Venezuelas Hugo Chavez and to the opposition
to the Aristide regime in Haiti. IRI President Lorne Cramer denied
that the organization that he heads meddled in the
Mexican elections; they asked for our help, said Cramer.
There are signs of increasing concern by US business interests.
An August 31 front-page article in the Wall Street Journal
raises the possibility that Mexico will become a headache
in its growing list of global problems, for the United States.
The article denounces what it calls mob rule in Oaxaca
and criticizes President Foxs unwillingness to use force
in Oaxaca and against Lopez Obrador. The Oaxaca struggle developed
independently of the PRD mobilization, but the Journal made
an amalgam of both struggles. It quotes a PAN official claiming
that the Oaxaca protests and strikes are a blueprint for
the PRD to force Calderón out of office.
The Wall Street Journals advice to Fox notwithstanding,
the Mexican government has not shied from using violence to repress
the struggles of workers. It was directly involved in the assault
on metal workers at the Sicartsa steel mill last April, where
two workers were killed, for instance. What this mouthpiece of
the US business elite is demanding is even more force, a heavy
hand to repress any social struggle that stands in the way of
US corporate interests.
See Also:
Mexico's election tribunal
denies Lopéz Obrador's challenge to July vote
[29 August 2006]
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