Latin America
Related: About this forum"If I win the presidency there will be efforts to stop the transfer of power"
Monday, August 14, 2023
José Luis Sanz / Guatemala City
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Six weeks ago, the presidential first-round election reordered Guatemalas political map around the Semilla Movement, a small progressive party born six years ago with the electoral baggage of being too urban, too intellectual and middle-class, too should-be obsessed. Next Sunday, August 20, the surprise would be if the party candidate, the 65-year-old academic and former diplomat Bernardo Arévalo, does not win.
In a country suffocated by racism and elites gluttony, Arévalo has unwittingly managed in the last two months to bind together the excitement of urban university students, hopes of Indigenous movements denouncing centuries of exclusion, and anti-system exhaustion that in other countries has stoked populism. While the state has incarcerated journalists and exiled 30 of its brightest anti-mafia judges and prosecutors, the son of the first president of the 1944 revolution promises a renewed democratic spring.
He will push what the mighty international anti-impunity commission CICIG fell short: to cleanse state institutions of corruption and lay bare the very business, partisan, military, and criminal alliances that since June 25 have sought by every means possible to bar his candidacy.
If the Sunday election is a referendum between continuity his opponent Sandra Torres has accused him of being an anti-Christian, foreigner, and homosexual on the campaign trail while promising cash money, baskets of food, houses, and even plots of land then a Semilla presidency would pose a radical dilemma to the entire political system, especially to those who have been active or silent accomplices to recent governments: whether to join a dialogue in search of baseline democratic consensus or betray voters evident desire for change.
More:
https://elfaro.net/en/202308/centroamerica/26982/if-i-win-the-presidency-there-will-be-efforts-to-stop-the-transfer-of-power
Marcus IM
(3,001 posts)It makes them harder to exploit for Wall Street and passive incomes for investors.
And they might have to pay (((gasp))) TAXES!
Judi Lynn
(162,396 posts)to their puppets in Congress. It would be such a shame for the ones who matter here to have to start shelling out more money to their Congress tools. Haven't heard the term "passive incomes" before, but that's excellent.
Have noticed the strange positions most Congressional Democrats seem to take, as if they don't know a thing about US history and policy re: LatAm. There are some great ones, some brave ones, but not so many who will speak right out, face to face, anytime. I believe most are afraid of being labeled as a "useful idiot" or "pinko" or worse by the vile wingers who bully them continually, ready to pound them into the ground always, through cheap shots and name-calling, and lying.