home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1192>
- <title>
- Sep. 05, 1994: Mexico:The People's Choice, Really
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEXICO, Page 48
- The People's Choice, Really
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> By electing Zedillo President, the voters hope for peace and
- stability--and bigger paychecks
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Laura Lopez/Mexico City and Andres Martinez/San
- Miguel de Ocosingo
- </p>
- <p> It was already 8:30 a.m. on election day, and the one-room,
- dirt-floor polling station in San Miguel de Ocosingo, deep in
- the rebel territory of Chiapas state, should have opened half
- an hour ago. But ballot boxes had not arrived. The door stayed
- closed, and the line of expectant voters outside grew longer.
- Was this another case of ballot hijacking by the ruling Institutional
- Revolutionary Party, the P.R.I.? Finally, Caralampio Amparo
- Perez, an election official, emerged waving one of his replacement
- boxes over his head. He had improvised with cookie cartons;
- each had a hole cut into the side and covered with a plastic
- bag to create a makeshift window. The voters nodded, and by
- day's end they and the country had elected Ernesto Zedillo Ponce
- de Leon Mexico's next President.
- </p>
- <p> The true test of the elections was not who the winner would
- be--Zedillo had been leading in most opinion polls since July--but whether voters would believe that he had won fairly.
- During the P.R.I.'s lengthy reign, one of its most notorious
- achievements was its skill at arranging not to lose. But this
- time the electoral process had been significantly reformed,
- and more than 80,000 observers were stationed around the country
- to fend off the fraud that has been the rule so often before.
- The watchers, both Mexican and foreign, spotted many violations
- but agreed that they had seen the most open and honest election
- in Mexico this century.
- </p>
- <p> Because of, or in spite of that, the voters stuck with the P.R.I.
- "He looked like somebody clean," said Isidoro Pete Gonzalez,
- a former opposition voter in Tijuana. "He's not contaminated
- yet." Said Zedillo the next day: "We are a party plainly capable
- of being competitive." In an interview with TIME, he noted,
- "The party has to be explicit about its rules of internal democracy,"
- which might include primaries or conventions to select candidates
- rather than having the bosses do the picking.
- </p>
- <p> The election was in large measure a referendum on the P.R.I.'s
- new claims to political trustworthiness and the economic policies
- put in place by outgoing President Carlos Salinas de Gortari--most notably the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA),
- which went into effect Jan. 1. Many experts had been predicting
- that Zedillo, the unassuming technocrat plucked from obscurity
- after the party's first choice was assassinated in March, would
- win with less than half the votes and that the restive electorate
- would send large numbers of opposition members to Congress.
- The voters disproved those forecasts and gave the P.R.I. sizable
- majorities in both houses of Congress.
- </p>
- <p> The most impressive number of all was that 77% of registered
- voters turned out. When the leftist Democratic Revolutionary
- Party (P.R.D.) put up a strong challenge for the presidency
- in 1988, only 48% of the electorate went to the polls. This
- time, say analysts, voters truly believed that their choice
- would count. High-profile campaign coverage convinced many that
- a real race was on, and a massive registration program provided
- new photo identification cards to more than 45 million of the
- 50 million eligible voters.
- </p>
- <p> There were encouraging signs that a genuine two-party system
- is beginning to emerge. Six splinter parties did very poorly;
- so did the leftist P.R.D., led by Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, which
- won only 17%. His party seems likely to fracture and fade further.
- Meanwhile, the center-right, business-oriented National Action
- Party (P.A.N.) surged from 16% of the electorate in 1988 to
- almost 27%. The party looks like a challenger in the making.
- "For the P.A.N.," says Denise Dresser, a political scientist
- at the Autonomous Technological Institute of Mexico, "the race
- did not end on Aug. 21. It began on Aug. 22."
- </p>
- <p> In choosing Zedillo, Mexicans voted for stability. They had
- been badly frightened by a year of upheaval that began with
- the armed rebellion in Chiapas led by angry peasants and included
- political assassination and kidnappings of wealthy businessmen.
- Such fears helped the party in power, which offered security
- and familiarity even to the multitudes who have yet to share
- the fruits of economic reform. Federico Reyes Heroles, director
- of the magazine Este Pais, thinks that the split of just over
- half the votes for Zedillo and slightly less than half for the
- opposition "is a faithful picture of what the country feels
- like"--wanting change but shrinking from it.
- </p>
- <p> In the rural town of Ocoyocac, Felipe Eleno, 39, stepped out
- of a voting booth with his two-year-old son on his shoulders.
- "I support stability and democracy and tranquillity," he said.
- "So it's not too hard to guess who I voted for." Jorge Alaniz,
- a bank employee in Mexico City, was thinking about voting for
- the P.A.N. but stuck with the ruling party. "I thought Zedillo
- was a safe pair of hands," he said. "I just hope he can make
- the economy take off so my kids can have a good future." When
- Zedillo assumes office on Dec. 1, the country expects continuity
- from him, not dramatic new policies. Salinas has already pulled
- Mexico back from economic catastrophe with free-market policies,
- privatization and a fierce war on inflation. "On the economic
- side, Zedillo doesn't have to do anything at all," says Jonathan
- Heath, a Mexico City consultant. "We've already started a recovery."
- But of course, Zedillo does have to do something. His biggest
- task will be to turn his victory into good news for the poor.
- Ines Ramirez, selling flowers on a Mexico City street corner,
- says she voted for Zedillo. "He's a bit of a cold fish," she
- says, "but he was poor when he was young. Let's hope he doesn't
- forget us now that he's in power."
- </p>
- <p> Zedillo will have to keep a grip on inflation but also push
- for economic growth. He will have to find ways to get more purchasing
- power to consumers, spreading the country's rising prosperity
- more evenly. If he cannot do it, the vote next time could produce
- real change: a President who is not from the P.R.I.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-