Will Fox be a Mexican Jefferson?
By Itai Sneh History News Service
What a difference 71 years can make. Since 1929,
following decades of civic unrest, internal warfare and
repeated U.S. military interventions, the PRI, the Spanish
acronym for the Institutionalized Revolutionary Party, has
controlled Mexican politics.
The party's name suggested revolutionary zeal, but in
fact it brought genuine institutional stability to several
generations who preferred authoritarian rule and a
centralized government to chaos.
The PRI incorporated every powerful element in Mexican
society -- the church, the army, the professional-business
class, the landowners, the urban middle class and the trade
unions. It created vast monopolies while oppressing the
peasants and workers who formed the bulk of the population.
The system foiled all potential opponents through
brutality, patronage and corruption. The emigration of
millions of Mexicans to the United States served as a safety
valve against demographic pressures and economic downturns.
So why the change now?
January 1, 1994 is the date future history books will
designate as the beginning of the end of the PRI domination.
The North American Free Trade Agreement came into effect and
transformed Mexico's situation in the world. Meanwhile, the
Chiapas uprising led by indigenous Marxist militants exposed
the socioeconomic fault lines in Mexican society.
The center could hold no more. Forces of globalization
coupled with a decaying party and a restive electorate
cracked it. The assassination of a PRI candidate in
mysterious circumstances nearly lost it the 1994 elections.
Thereafter the economy took precedence over the
government. Being a NAFTA partner diminished the importance
of the state as the sole arbiter of labor and political
issues. The concomitant opening of the markets hurt several
domestic giants in the oil and telecommunication sections.
The increased mobility of skilled young people dampened
loyalty to the PRI.
Exposure to universal standards of human rights militated
against the traditional abuses in police conduct, which
violated individual liberties and collective rights. Demands
for better work conditions, civic freedoms and land reforms
grew.
Both glasnost and perestroika were in the air; now they
merged, although the outgoing leader, Ernesto Zedillo, fell
short of being a Gorbachev. The PRI did not implode, but it
could no longer count on traditional loyalties. The growing
maturity of Mexican politics became apparent in the
considerable openness in the process of selecting
candidates, as opposed to handpicking by incumbent party
leaders or cabals. The final contenders used relatively
sophisticated advertising.
The opposition candidate elected on July 2, Vicente Fox
Quesada, was cautious and not so populist as to alarm
entrenched powers. His message was relatively conservative,
highlighting political evolution and law and order, not a
revolution or a purge.
Fox exuded a business-like, cooperative approach. Perhaps
the decisive element was his ability to listen. Fox was
receptive to public opinion and to shifting agendas in
different generations and various parts of Mexico, and
assembled a professional and competent team of advisers.
The one-time Coca-Cola executive projected an image of a
regular guy with a big mouth. But he also utilized an able
cadre of damage-controllers and planners. He struck the
right chord in an electorate eager for a change.
But will President Fox be a Jefferson? In 1800, the
United States experienced its first peaceful turnover of
power from elected officials of one party to their
opponents. Thomas Jefferson then presided over a process of
democratization facilitating the foundation of a genuine
Empire for Liberty.
The Revolution of 1800 recast American politics. Only the
sectional crisis that culminated with the Civil War rivaled
it in importance. With few exceptions, elections ever since
have been hotly contested. Their results reflected the
public will (with the possible exception of 1876). The
United States became a democracy in which real issues and
changes of policy affected by popular desires became the
norm.
If the transfer of power in Mexico proves smooth, it will
establish a precedent. If Fox manages to sidestep the
dinosaurs of bureaucracy, and if the PRI will abandon its
strongholds of feudal power, and if the huge stratum of
people dependent on patronage and favoritism will yield,
then Mexico may merit acceptance into the community of
democracies.
Itai Sneh is a graduate student in history at Columbia
University and a writer for the History News Service.
[Itai Sneh, 109 Seaman Ave., 2H, New York, NY 10034.
Telephone: (212) 544-9625; e-mail: is66@columbia.edu.]
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This article was posted on July 9, 2000.
Pictured at top (left to right): The battle of
Thermopylae, Copernicus, Henry David Thoreau, Sigmund Freud,
The Allied invasion of Normandy on D-Day.
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