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Post-Fox Mexico
Will a Hugo Chávez-style leftist become president south of the border?
by Angel Jaramillo
04/17/2006, Volume 011, Issue 29

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Mexico City
ON JULY 2, the people of Mexico will elect a president, along with some 2,000 other public officials. Ideally, this exercise will strengthen the democratic process in a country where popular self-government has had a checkered past.

Democracy in Mexico goes back to the constitution of 1857, in which Benito Juárez and others sowed the seeds of self-rule. Unfortunately, the revolution of 1910 brought back to the fore a rival tradition, patrimonial and statist. Many decades would pass before, in the final decade of the twentieth century, the "perfect dictatorship," as the writer Mario Vargas Llosa called the Mexican political system, turned out to be weak. When Vicente Fox--a former Coca-Cola executive running under the banner of the center-right party, PAN--was elected president in 2000, there were grounds for optimism. Many commentators announced the dawning of an era of economic prosperity, political liberty, and social peace.

But once again, the path to democracy has proved uneven. After leading Mexico for more than five years, Fox, it is clear, is not the statesman his country needs. He missed a great opportunity. For one thing, he failed to grasp the meaning of September 11 and how it had changed Americans' thinking. Partly out of parochialism, he failed to see that new forms of international crime had outstripped existing provisions for civilized punishment. His delayed response after the attacks showed a lack of solidarity with the American people--not to mention the many Mexicans incinerated in the Twin Towers and the Pentagon.

More to the point, Fox
made no serious effort to eliminate the remnants of Mexico's ancien régime. Admittedly, the members of the Mexican Congress bear some blame; they were more interested in petty self-interest than in the well-being of the nation. Nevertheless, President Fox failed as leader, and Mexico is in a state of governmental deadlock.

Indeed, there is a wide consensus that Mexico's democracy is at a crossroads. The next president must confront powerful drug cartels and organized crime, promote the rule of law, spur the creation of wealth and jobs, and manage globalization. The coming election is shaping up as a three-way contest.

The corrupt and oligarchic Revolutionary Institutional party (PRI) which ruled Mexico for 71 years, has chosen a candidate of the old guard. Robert Madrazo long flourished as an apparatchik and political leader within the PRI, and now offers empty rhetoric and an outdated program. Even some of his supporters have little confidence in him. The recent involvement of the PRI governor of the state of Puebla in an alleged plot to jail a journalist will likely further damage Madrazo. Ideologically a chameleon party, the PRI has no clear stance on the issues. Madrazo's best hope is to be seen as the least of three evils, an unlikely outcome in light of his party's history. At this point Madrazo is trailing the other two candidates slightly, and it would take a miracle to put him into the lead.

The real contenders are Felipe Calderón, of the center-right PAN, and Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the former mayor of Mexico City and the candidate of Mexico's third party, the left-wing Democratic Revolutionary party (PRD).



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