Lopez Obrador Is Dismantling Democracy in Mexico
Lopez
Obrador Is Dismantling Democracy in Mexico
By: Shannon
K O´Neil
Taken form:
Bloomberg
Latin
America’s two biggest economies are in their first 100 days under new
management. During the presidential campaigns in Brazil and Mexico, democracy’s
champions worried most about Brazil, given Jair Bolsonaro’s nostalgia for
military rule. Yet today it is Mexico’s democracy that is under greater threat:
President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, known as AMLO, is systematically
concentrating power in an already strong executive.
From the
start, AMLO has undermined democratic norms and checks and balances. Despite
controlling a constitutional majority in Mexico’s Chamber of Deputies and
sizable majority in its Senate, he has often chosen to work outside the formal
legislative process. Instead he has relied on dubious public “referendums,”
sampling small and politically skewed groups to set agricultural policy, boost
pensions, authorize infrastructure projects and create scholarships.
He has
attacked and stacked the courts. He quickly moved to cut judges’ salaries and
take control of court officials’ evaluations and promotions. His first
nominations to the highest bench include the wife of a favored contractor and
party loyalists.
He is
taking on the islands of independence within the government, slashing the
budgets of the electoral institute, the transparency agency and many sectoral
regulators. He and his political allies are using the bully pulpit,
congressional inquiries and the tax authority to go after commissioners who
have dared to question his methods, whether for granting big contracts without
an open bidding process or nominating unqualified candidates to technical
commissions.
The same
goes for Mexico’s “deep state”: Salary cuts and widespread firings are weeding
out the technically minded and non-partisan within the civil service. AMLO has
also gone after outside organizations, preferring to shutter women’s shelters
rather than provide funds to independent NGOs.
Throughout
it all, AMLO’s public opinion ratings are record-high, giving him domestic room
to push forward. A decimated political opposition has yet to regroup.
This power
grab has been complemented by an aggressive expansion of his political base.
He’s sacrificed education reform to gain the loyalty of a teachers’ union that
is more than one million strong. He is building a parallel labor confederation
to challenge the Mexican Workers Confederation, long allied to the once-dominant
Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). He’s offering price supports on rice,
beans, corn and wheat to rural farmers. And he is doling out cash—lots of it:
monthly stipends for nearly 10 million retirees, more than 5 million students
and 2 million other young people, and to 4 million disabled.
He’s even
reached out to the military, departing from his campaign rhetoric by handing
over national security to a militarized national guard and giving the armed
forces their own independent sources of revenue through the construction and
operation of a new Mexico City airport and other real estate.
AMLO’s
calculated strategy isn’t a new Mexican playbook. It harkens back to the PRI’s
heyday, when the party maintained economic and political control of businesses,
labor, the countryside and any semblance of civil society.
Then the
PRI amassed such power using the billions of dollars flowing into government
coffers from its own oil as well as from loans from international banks awash
in petrodollars. With energy production and revenues falling, AMLO will see no
such financial largesse. He needs to find other ways to fund his ambitious
political project.
This may be
his undoing. Cancelled contracts, ratings agency attacks, and announcements of
new unfunded programs and projects are eroding domestic and international
investor trust, slowing if not freezing the tens of billions in investment
dollars needed to grow the economy by funding infrastructure, factories and
salaries. White elephant projects and poor planning (such as buying expensive,
inefficient trucks to move gasoline around the country in an effort to curb
pipeline thefts) are increasing the government’s costs.
In the end,
money will allow him to succeed or to fail. Even with the destruction of democratic
counterweights, vote-getting patronage networks require financial glue. With
enough funds, he can solidify his growing political base for years to come.
Without money his star will fade, as financial crises rarely treat even the
most popular of politicians well. Tragically, what will last is the damage to
Mexico’s fragile institutions: democratic checks and balances are much harder
to build than to break.
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