Calderon confirmed as president but opposition protests continue

Mexico:

Calderon confirmed as president but opposition protests continue

MEXICO’S HIGHEST electoral tribunal has, after more than two months
of deliberation, decided that the presidential elections held on 2 July
were won by the right-wing candidate Filipe Calderon of the PAN (Partido
Accion Nacional). With this decision, the judges are endorsing the
massive electoral fraud that took place in the country.

Karl Debbaut

The mass movement lead by the opposition candidate and Mexico City’s
former mayor, Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador (popularly known as Amlo),
demanded a full recount of all the votes. However, the country’s top
electoral court only allowed for a partial recount of 9% of the votes.

This shrank Filipe Calderon’s advantage from 240,000 votes to a mere
233,831 out of 41.6 million votes cast. Nonetheless, Judge Alfonsina
Berta Navarro Hidalgo, a member of the Electoral Tribunal, dismissed
calls for a full recount, saying "there are no perfect elections".

Conspiracy of silence

The scale of the fraud is still being revealed and is reaching
ever-higher levels. According to Amlo’s campaign, the sample recount
revealed that in 3,500 polling stations 119,000 votes couldn’t be
verified. In 4,000 other polling stations 61,000 ballots allocated to
election officials cannot be accounted for. These figures emerged after
only a partial recount, rather than the full recount being demanded by
Amlo and his supporters.

The movement in Mexico in protest at the electoral fraud has been the
biggest in the country’s history. A tent city has been erected in Mexico
City by supporters of Amlo. The protesters seem to have been inspired by
the so-called ‘Orange revolution’ in the Ukraine in December 2004.

However, unlike those events, the protests in Mexico have met with a
deafening silence in the international press. Many news agencies are
putting out the message that ‘all is for the best in the best of all
possible worlds’ and that the 39% of Mexicans who believe there was
fraud are suffering from delusions.

The people in the tent city are very clear why there was fraud and
why they are protesting.

The Times (8/9/06) carried a quote from a 47-year-old teacher, Joel
Cruz de la Torre, who said: "I am here to defend democracy from the
fraud that was perpetrated by Fox". He was registering to take part in
elections for a parallel government, a government which will be the
focal point of more opposition action in the next few months. He
declared what many Mexicans feel: "Our representatives don’t represent
us – they represent the rich, they do not respond to the 60% of Mexicans
who are poor".

Grinding poverty means that one-in-five Mexicans do not eat properly.
In the last six years, six million Mexicans have left their country to
look for a better life in the United States. A report by the United
Nations suggests that the money sent back by people living in the US to
Mexico is the country’s second biggest source of income after oil.

A parallel government

The horrendous living conditions of the Mexican masses are in sharp
contrast with the life of splendour and luxury the ruling elite and the
corrupt political establishment enjoy.

The ruling class feared Lopéz Obrador, but not because he is a
revolutionary socialist or an anti-capitalist. Obrador was kept out
because of the fear that he could act as a lightning rod and guide for
more radical action and new waves of class struggle.

While the ruling class will do everything, including using violence
against the protesters, to try to get a Calderon government in place, it
looks like more powerful social movements and explosions are on the
agenda.

A number of international commentators have changed tack and instead
of calling for a full recount are now asking Calderon to "take some of
the leftish planks from his rival, refashion them in a way that makes
them acceptable to his own followers and turn them into policy".

These analysts are proposing the creation of a means-tested national
healthcare system as a temporary concession to the masses in the hope
that this will avert the rising tide of class struggle.

Lopéz Obrador has announced the creation of a parallel "government of
the people to rival that of the political mafia and white-collar
criminals", calling a mass rally on 16 September, Independence Day.

While this ‘parallel government’ could give direction to the struggle
against the electoral fraud, it would need to build a real structure
based on the trade unions, organisations in the communities and
representatives of the poor. Local, democratically elected committees
would have to be built in workplaces, schools and universities to direct
the struggle and to discuss the demands and aims at every stage.

The massive protests have already demonstrated the potential strength
of the movement, but now we need forceful action, including the
organising of a one-day general strike, as the next step in the
movement. This needs to be connected with steps to begin building a real
party of workers and peasants based on a revolutionary socialist
programme for the overthrow of capitalism.