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- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (misc.activism.progressive co-moderator)
- Subject: ABSENCE OF COERCION: Was Nicaragua More Democratic than the U.S.?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.105951.15898@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: misc.activism.progressive on UseNet ; ACTIV-L@UMCVMB
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 10:59:51 GMT
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- Lines: 127
-
- ABSENCE OF COERCION: Was Nicaragua More Democratic than the U.S.?
-
- [From:
- ========================================================
- I s N i c a r a g u a M o r e D e m o c r a t i c
- ========================================================
- T h a n t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s ?
- ========================================================
- By Michael Parenti (*)
-
- [From: Covert Action Information Bulletin, Number 26, Summer 1986]]
-
-
- =====================================
- A b s e n c e o f C o e r c i o n
- =====================================
-
- Instances of coercion and harassment of candidates have not been an
- unusual occurrence in U.S. elections. In the United States third-party
- candidates especially those of a pronouncedly leftist hue have run
- into difficulties of this sort. Harassment may not be confined to the
- candidates themselves but may include their supporters and canvassers.
- In 1972 in Vermont persons who merely signed Communist Party ballot
- petitions found their names publicized by town clerks in an effort to
- embarrass them into withdrawing their signatures. Generally though,
- in modern times American elections have not been marked by violence
- nor by any serious degree of threat against candidates. The coercions
- are largely of the legal kind noted earlier which work well enough
- against third parties. In regard to individual voters, however, it
- should be noted that not every American citizen has the right to an
- uncoerced vote, as testified by the continuing need for a Civil Rights
- Voting Act, the renewal of which President Reagan opposed.
-
- Turning to Nicaragua, we find there were serious acts of violence and
- murder in the 1984 election -- all committed by the force supported by
- the Reagan administration. The contras killed the presidents of two
- polling stations and two volunteer workers involved in registration.
- In the Jinotega mountains, one polling station worker's throat was cut
- by the contras in front of his wife and family. On election day a
- member of the electoral police was shot to death by contras in La
- Tronica. In all, twelve election workers lost their lives in assaults
- by countenrevolutionaries .
-
- The election was less than flawless in its procedures, but the overall
- performance was one that the Nicaraguan democracy can be proud of.
- There was free and open campaigning in every area of the country
- except in some war zones. According to estimates by the Supreme
- Electoral Council, there were some 250 public rallies. In general the
- election was characterized by untrammeled and vigorous political
- debate. If the FSLN was instituting a totalitarian regime, it was
- going about it in the wrong way.
-
- About five of the public rallies were marred by incidents of violence
- but no serious injuries were reported. During the first months of the
- campaign a number of parties also reported that their campaign workers
- had been harassed by members of the FSLN, or that their posters had
- been destroyed. The Sandinista leadership denounced these incidents
- and they seemed to diminish thereafter. In addition, several rallies
- held by the Nicaraguan Democratic Coordinating Committee (CDN), a
- coalition of conservative business-oriented parties that abstained
- from the election, were disrupted by fights between CDN supporters and
- Sandinista counterdemonstrators. These rallies were technically
- illegal since the CDN had refused to participate in the election and
- indeed spent its time during the campaign attacking the electoral
- system itself. Once the CDN decided to conduct what seemed like a
- sabotage of the electoral effort (in the eyes of FSLN supporters),
- clashes with counterdemonstrators were difficult to avoid.
-
- Because of these incidents, Arturo Cruz claimed that he was attacked
- by 'mobs' and that free electoral competition did not exist. It should
- be recalled that the country is at war and that Cruz openly identified
-
- [And was a payed agent of the terrorist superpower attacking
- Nicaragua, as documented earlier in this series -- HB]
-
- with the enemy and was not at any time functioning as a legal or
- serious candidate. When Cruz, a banker in Wellington, arrived in
- Managua five months before the election, the CDN suddenly announced he
- would be their unified presidential candidate. Without officially
- registering as a candidate, Cruz toured the country for several days,
- drawing small crowds As suddenly as he arrived, he left, announcing
-
- --> [Use GET (see near top) command with NICA-84 ELECTION for ]
- [documentation of the consistent patter of contra preelection]
- [terror; of Cruz's never having intended to run, and, in ]
- [fact, having been on the CIA payroll (and of "small crowds")]
-
- he would not run under the prevailing electoral conditions.
- Throughout this period the U.S. media and the U.S. government
- described him as the ``major opposition candidate'' and treated his
- nonparticipation as evidence that the election was an unfair and
- meaningless exercise. In conflict with this view is the one expressed
- in the report, cited herein, by U.S. citizens in Nicaragua:
-
- In general, our perception of the electoral campaign period is
- that the harassment and fistfights were scattered incidents that
- did not affect the generally free atmosphere of the electoral
- process. We found our neighbors and co-workers unafraid to voice
- their opinions, and heard and read virulent criticism of the FSLN.
- We know of no pressure on Nicaraguan to vote for the Sandinista
- Front. In particular, we found no truth in the charge made by _La
- Prensa_ that the cards which entitle families to receive
- subsidized food allotments were controlled in a concerted effort
- to influence Nicaraguans'' votes. We conclude that the electoral
- campaign provided Nicaraguans with abundant information on which
- to base a free decision about their vote.
-
- A similar conclusion was reached by the 460 official observers from
- all over the world who were free to check out all aspects of the
- voting process and ballot counting. None of the eleven participating
- parties filed any charges of fraud.
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- --> [Send the 1-line message GET FAIRNESS NICA-USA ACTIV-L to]
- [LISTSERV@MIZZOU1.BITNET for a copy of this file. ]
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- [two words separated by a space), send the 1-line message: ]
-
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-
- to: LISTSERV@MIZZOU1.BITNET [or: LISTSERV@MIZZOU1.MISSOURI.EDU]
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