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- <text id=94TT1086>
- <title>
- Aug. 22, 1994: Mexico:The Making of El Presidente
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 22, 1994 Stee-rike!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEXICO, Page 38
- The Making of El Presidente
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Will political reforms bring Mexicans their first fair, clean
- election?
- </p>
- <p>By Michael S. Serrill--Reported by Laura Lopez/Mexico City, Elizabeth Love, Oaxaca
- and Dick Woodbury/Nuevo Laredo
- </p>
- <p> The black-masked leader of the insurgent Zapatista National
- Liberation Army, who calls himself Subcomandante Marcos, summoned
- nearly 5,000 activists deep into the Lacandon forest in Chiapas
- state last week to deliver his campaign promise. In an open-air
- amphitheater hastily erected of logs, as storm clouds gathered
- overhead, Marcos issued a stern warning to the government of
- President Carlos Salinas de Gortari. If there is fraud in the
- upcoming national election, he declared, there will be an explosion
- of protest that will shut down Mexico. Just as he stopped speaking,
- a powerful downpour brought the four-day gathering to a sudden
- end, setting off a dangerous shower of sparks from the encampment's
- electric lights.
- </p>
- <p> Though few in Mexico really expect a massive uprising when the
- winner is announced after next week's presidential vote, the
- Chiapas declaration touched a national nerve. An anxious Mexico,
- ruled by the longest-lived one-party system in the world, is
- about to hold its most competitive election ever. For the first
- time since 1929, the long tradition of fraudulent elections
- has given way to a belief that the opposition has a genuine
- chance of winning. Yet most prospective voters remain to some
- degree skeptical of government promises that the vote will be
- completely clean and fraud free. "I don't support any candidate
- because all I see is corruption and promises that are never
- kept," said Fidel Lopez Cruz, 67, as he pushed his crude ox-drawn
- plow across a small plot of land near Oaxaca. If the public
- concludes the results have been fixed, the new President could
- face a prolonged period of unrest.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, as many as 45 million out of 87 million Mexicans
- may turn up at the polls on Aug. 21, eager to register their
- complaints about corruption, crime, injustice to the poor, unemployment
- and unfulfilled government promises of a better standard of
- living. The January uprising by peasants in Chiapas, the assassination
- of the ruling party's presidential candidate in March, a gradual
- downturn in the economy, and an outburst of drug shootings and
- kidnappings have convinced a large segment of Mexico's people
- that their society needs serious repair. Just a month ago, they
- appeared to resent the failures of the Salinas government so
- bitterly that many were ready to turn out his Institutional
- Revolutionary Party (P.R.I.).
- </p>
- <p> The most recent polls indicate that voters may well adhere to
- their favorite axiom: Better the evil you know than the one
- you have yet to meet. "Mexicans are torn between their desire
- for change and their fear of change," says Delal Baer, director
- of the Mexico Project at the Center for Strategic and International
- Studies in Washington. In the privacy of the voting booth, she
- added, they may well choose the certitude of the P.R.I. over
- the question marks represented by the opposition.
- </p>
- <p> As election day approached, the contest was still considered
- a race even though the colorless P.R.I. candidate, Ernesto Zedillo
- Ponce de Leon, had pulled ahead. A survey two weeks ago by the
- Center for Opinion Studies in Guadalajara showed him defeating
- conservative National Action Party (P.A.N.) candidate Diego
- Fernandez de Cevallos 35% to 25%, with 20% undecided. Cuauhtemoc
- Cardenas, candidate of the leftist Party for the Democratic
- Revolution (P.R.D.) lagged far behind. But even polling experts
- do not put much trust in Mexican surveys: voters have long been
- so fearful of government reprisal that they would rather lie
- than openly state their preferences.
- </p>
- <p> The election campaign turned surprisingly competitive on May
- 12, when P.A.N.'s acerbic Fernandez de Cevallos, a cigar-chomping
- lawyer from Mexico City, demolished his rivals in a televised
- debate--the first ever in Mexico and a symbol of how much
- the political process has opened up. Nearly half the population
- watched entranced as Jefe, or Chief, Diego, as he is known,
- chided the wooden Zedillo for flunking democracy and charged
- Cardenas, for years a P.R.I. stalwart, with only pretending
- to be in the opposition. Smelling victory for the first time
- in its 55-year history, the P.A.N., traditionally a conservative
- party with limited mass appeal, promoted itself as "centrist"
- and went after Everyman's vote.
- </p>
- <p> The bearded Fernandez hammered away at the need for "honesty"
- in government and made a virtual mantra of the word change.
- The once business-oriented P.A.N. emphasized its social conscience,
- declaring that the government's modernization plans paid too
- little attention to the needs of the poor. At his booth in the
- Oaxaca crafts market, rug vendor Antonio Mendoza Martinez pledged
- his vote: "It gives me great pleasure to hear Diego say, Enough
- lies." After limited public appearances in June and early July
- deflated his campaign, Fernandez picked up the pace in the weeks
- just before the election.
- </p>
- <p> The appeal of Cardenas is harder to assess. Virtually endorsed
- by the leftist Zapatista convention, which could hurt him with
- the moderates, and popular in some urban areas, he has not generated
- the kind of enthusiasm that contributed to his strong showing
- in the 1988 election. But some analysts say he may well do better
- than expected if he can tap into the anger of the poor. Nicolas
- Urbano, a 42-year-old gardener on the outskirts of Mexico City,
- says he likes Cardenas "because he's different from that gang
- of thieves who always let us down."
- </p>
- <p> What Zedillo, a Yale Ph.D. in economics and a former Budget
- Minister with scant charisma, has going for him is his party:
- the tremendous reservoir of organized support for the P.R.I.
- based on pork-barrel politics that extends to almost every corner
- of society. Though weakened by Salinas' efforts to replace the
- corrupt Old Guard with his own team of Ivy League-educated technocrats,
- the P.R.I. is still so well entrenched in labor unions, peasant
- organizations and the Solidarity committees that run public-works
- projects that millions would not consider voting for any other
- party. "I've belonged to the P.R.I. since I was a girl," said
- Carmen Hernandez Tzompantzi, 48, as she enjoyed spicy tamales,
- quesadillas and coffee at a P.R.I. breakfast in Tlaxcala. "The
- government always knows how to get us ahead. We don't know how
- the opposition might act."
- </p>
- <p> Zedillo also owes his strength to the successes of Salinas,
- who can take credit for raising Mexico out of financial ruins
- during his six-year term. He has resolved Mexico's debt crisis,
- tamed triple-digit inflation, privatized the stagnant economy
- and ushered in a new era in trade by signing the North American
- Free Trade Agreement. A look at the economic platforms of the
- main presidential candidates shows how completely Salinas has
- altered thinking about Mexico's economic life: all three have
- committed themselves to continuing his free-market course.
- </p>
- <p> The centerpiece of Salinas' program, NAFTA, will remain untouched.
- Even Cardenas, who opposed the agreement before it was implemented
- on Jan. 1, has said he will do no more than study the accord
- to see which sectors of the Mexican economy may need more protection.
- Other key Salinas reforms are likely to remain intact regardless
- of who wins the election: the autonomy of the central bank,
- the privatization of the country's banks and major industries,
- and liberal rules for foreign investment.
- </p>
- <p> But Salinas' economic modernization is also Zedillo's biggest
- handicap. As Oaxacan rug seller Mendoza Martinez notes, "The
- government says we're moving ahead, but I want to know just
- who is moving ahead." Though economists are nearly unanimous
- in predicting that NAFTA and other market reforms will bring
- prosperity in the long run, the majority of Mexicans have yet
- to benefit. Unemployment and underemployment reach 30% in some
- regions as companies slash their payrolls to compete in international
- markets. Productivity is up, but most workers in the maquiladora
- industrial assembly plants along the border still earn $5 a
- day. Mexico's banks are scrambling to reschedule more than $3
- billion in nonperforming loans from 25,000 failing small businesses.
- In a voter survey conducted for foreign banks, 29% said the
- economy had deteriorated during the Salinas administration while
- just 24% said it was better.
- </p>
- <p> If Zedillo ultimately sets up house in the Los Pinos presidential
- residence, it will probably be because the opposition parties
- and their candidates simply lack the stature to win. "There
- is some dissatisfaction with the P.R.I.," says Nancy Belden
- of Belden and Russonello Associates in Washington, which conducted
- the bank poll. "But Zedillo is holding the lead because of a
- lack of faith in the alternative. He is benefiting from the
- idea that no one can do any better." Bonifacio de la Cruz Dominguez
- barely supports his family of five on his earnings selling soft
- drinks at a Mexico City intersection. But he will still vote
- for the P.R.I. "They've always given us help," he says. "We
- can be sure with the P.R.I. The other parties would trick us."
- </p>
- <p> Yet this election guarantees a major change in Mexico's political
- life. Even if the P.R.I. wins the presidency, it will probably
- lose its handsome majority in both houses of the Congress, which
- will cease to be a rubber stamp for P.R.I. initiatives. For
- the first time in 65 years, the man at the top will not have
- absolute power. As if in acknowledgment, Zedillo has promised
- that he will give up the P.R.I. president's traditional dedazo
- (big finger) power to anoint his party's candidate for the top
- job .
- </p>
- <p> Most important, the electoral process has undergone wholesale
- reform. Salinas' own 1988 presidential victory was widely challenged
- as fraudulent; on election night the P.R.D.'s Cardenas was ahead
- when the vote-counting machines allegedly broke down. Only two
- days later was the count resumed, and Salinas emerged the winner.
- He denies that he won by cheating, but he initiated a series
- of reforms that have loosened the P.R.I.'s grip on power. National
- elections are now organized by a nonpartisan commission rather
- than by the P.R.I.-dominated electoral body that it replaced.
- The commission has spent some $730 million compiling new local
- voter rolls--the old ones were swollen with the dead and departed--and issuing 45 million voters plastic identification cards
- marked with their photo and fingerprint. Penalties have been
- increased for vote tampering; more than 21,000 Mexican observers
- and 1,032 foreign "visitors" have been accredited to monitor
- the vote.
- </p>
- <p> As a consequence, "this is a very contested election that is
- likely to have credible results," says Lorenzo Meyer, a researcher
- in political science at the College of Mexico. Even if the P.R.I.
- wins next week, he adds, "nothing can be like it was before.
- Not elections, not Congress or the presidency." The P.R.I. may
- endure in power, but the era of the one-party state is finished.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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