A New Hope For Mexico: Saying No to Corruption, Violence, and Trump's Wall
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“I’m not going to limit myself to condemning corruption and calling for its eradication; I also want to set out . . . a new politics, a different economic model, and the strengthening of cultural, moral, and spiritual values that can revitalize our nation.”
Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s (AMLO) stunning victory in the Mexican presidential election signals the end of decades of conservative government and the promise of fairer, more honest politics south of the Rio Grande.
AMLO’s landslide success was built on a campaign that pledged to tackle corruption, halt privatization of the energy industry, invest in education and infrastructure, open a dialogue with the country’s drug cartels, and oppose Trump’s border wall.
Mexicans have responded to this platform with a resounding “¡Sí!” Now, AMLO will make a reality of the bold vision set out in A New Hope for Mexico.
“We will strive tirelessly to convince the US government that fellowship, without walls or borders, is the best approach . . . we want no more families separated and no more bones in the Arizona desert.”
Andrés Manuel López Obrador
ANDRÉS MANUEL LÓPEZ OBRADOR, widely known as AMLO, was head of government of the Federal District (Mexico City) from 2000 to 2005, before resigning to run as a candidate in the 2006 and 2012 presidential elections, representing a coalition led by the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD). He is today the leader and founder of the National Regeneration Movement (MORENA).
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A New Hope For Mexico - Andrés Manuel López Obrador
© 2018 Andrés Manuel López Obrador
English translation © Natascha Uhlmann
Published by OR Books, New York and London
Visit our website at www.orbooks.com
All rights information: [email protected]
First printing 2018
First published in 2017 as 2018: La Salida and Oye, Trump by Editorial Planeta Mexicana.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher, except brief passages for review purposes.
Cataloging-in-Publication data is available from the Library of Congress.
A catalog record for this book is available from the British Library.
Typeset by Lapiz Digital Services, Chennai, India.
Published for the book trade by OR Books in partnership with
Counterpoint Press.
Distributed to the trade by Publishers Group West.
ISBN 978-1-944869-85-4 paperback
ISBN 978-1-944869-86-1 ebook
CONTENTS
Translator and Editor’s Note
Introduction
Chapter 1: A Gang of Thugs
Chapter 2: Privatization Is Theft
Chapter 3: Voracious Nepotism
Chapter 4: Killing the Goose that Lays the Golden Egg
Chapter 5: White Collar Crime
Chapter 6: Rescuing the State
Chapter 7: Honesty Is the Way Out
Chapter 8: Republican Austerity
Chapter 9: A Blueprint for Mexico’s Economic and Social Revitalization
Chapter 10: A Glimpse at 2024
Epilogue
TRANSLATOR AND EDITOR’S NOTE
Natascha Uhlmann
This work first appeared as two separate books, both published in Spanish in 2017: Oye, Trump (a collection of López Obrador’s speeches in defense of migrants) and La Salida ( The Exit , a broader political platform addressing economic ills, migration, and corruption). Although each of these books provide insight into the man who—according to many—will likely be the next president of Mexico—they are in many ways even more powerful when combined: AMLO’s policy proposals underpin and flesh out his more short-form work, while his impassioned speeches make clear the stakes of his more detailed political roadmap.
That, too, is the central takeaway of AMLO’s work—together, we are more than the sum of our parts. This work is a powerful call for solidarity, presenting a tangible way forward in the face of endemic corruption and anti-migrant rhetoric. Rosa Luxemburg once remarked: The more that social democracy develops, grows, and becomes stronger, the more the enlightened masses of workers will take their own destinies, the leadership of their movement, and the determination of its direction into their own hands.
In this book, López Obrador elucidates the steps which are needed for real and lasting change to transform Mexico, systemically, culturally, and institutionally.
A few decisions should be noted: Mexican pesos were converted to USD at the conversion rate in effect in April 2018. Some words that are inseparable from the Mexican context were left in their original Spanish, followed by an English approximation.
My deepest thanks to Steven Clarry, Donald and Maria Uhlmann, and Colin Robinson for their invaluable support and encouragement.
NYC, April 2018
INTRODUCTION
In these pages I want to explain why I regard corruption as Mexico’s central problem. At the same time, I want to call upon all Mexicans—men and women, rich and poor, city and town folk, believers and atheists—to reach a national consensus that places honesty as a central principle for both the people and government. I will explain the ways in which the country has been looted, and I will discuss how neoliberal—or what I refer to as Neoporfirista ¹—politics has given rise to rampant inequality, shocking poverty, frustration, resentment, hate, and violence.
I’m not going to limit myself here to condemning corruption and calling for its eradication; I also want to set out ways to combat it and move toward a new politics, a different economic model, and the strengthening of cultural, moral, and spiritual values that can revitalize our nation.
Although we’re not presenting the full Alternative Nation Project² until closer to the 2018 election, I will share some of its central points here, plans which are being developed by experts in their respective fields: governing by example, weeding out corruption, denying anyone the right to be above the law, managing public resources responsibly, and investing in the nation’s prosperity.
With this new and honest model of political action, there will be no need to raise taxes or continue to increase the public debt. Living and working conditions will improve, as economic and spiritual well-being flourish. In sum, we will achieve the pueblo’s prosperity and the rebirth of Mexico, as General Francisco J. Múgica³ said, through sheer morality and a few minor reforms.
I hope that these ideas become a reality, and I am working toward that end, but whatever happens, the program I am setting out here is dedicated to the younger generations, with the understanding that if we can’t create a new Mexico today because contemporary society won’t allow it, they, our youth, must take on this necessary task.
Although we followed the 2016 US elections closely, the principles of nonintervention and state sovereignty led us to keep a respectful distance from its internal politics, and the few times we did offer an opinion, we did so without interfering or taking sides.
But there are some things that can’t go unacknowledged. I recall that Donald Trump, upon announcing his candidacy on June 16, 2015, commented, When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best. They’re not sending you. They send people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs, they’re bringing crime, they’re rapists.
We’ve since asked ourselves whether Trump truly didn’t understand the basis of mass immigration or if he was just resorting to demagoguery, because Mexico does not send
anyone to the United States; it happens that millions of people have left our country in the pursuit of a better life through honest work in our neighbor to the north. The majority have left to improve their economic situation, while others flee the violence that plagues our homeland.
After the election, when the Republican contender was sworn into office, we decided to act. We knew that the current Mexican president, Enrique Peña Nieto, would not meet his duty to represent Mexico with dignity and that he would be unwilling to vigorously defend migrants. Experience proved us correct.
As campaign rhetoric morphed into government policy, we could no longer stand by idly. Our first move was to participate in a meeting on January 20, 2017, the day of Donald Trump’s inauguration, with the people in the border town of Acuña, Coahuila. Subsequently, in a two month span, we attended public gatherings in Los Angeles, Chicago, El Paso, Phoenix, New York, Washington, San Francisco, and Laredo.
As part of that mobilization, we delivered a note of protest to the United Nations, and a complaint to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights about Trump’s effort to build a border wall between Mexico and the United States, and about his attempts to persecute migrant workers.
The fact of the matter is that many Americans feel uneasy about the status of their neighbor to the south. We appreciate their concerns. At the same time, we want to clarify the reasons behind migration from Mexico, and initiate a dialogue with sectors of the American populace which have been subject to a misinformation campaign unleashed against Mexicans and migrants.
My central thesis is this: our migrants and our country deserve better.
I want to thank Rogelio Ramírez de la O for his reflections on economics and data. I also want to acknowledge the support of Father Alejandro Solalinde, who accompanied us to Los Angeles, and Elenita Poniatowska, who was with us in Laredo, where she read out the epilogue that concludes this book. Finally, I wish to thank Jaime Avilés, Jesús Ramírez Cuevas, Pedro Miguel, and Laura González Nieto for their help in revising this work.
¡Oye, Trump! Speech 1
The Night of the Election
A message to the people of Mexico on the US election results.
I believe it’s important to address the Mexican people, foremost migrant workers and their families, but also all of the people of Mexico, including businessmen and investors:
There is no cause for concern at the US election results. Don’t forget that Mexico, through the hard work and sacrifice of our forefathers, is a free, independent and sovereign nation, not a colony or protectorate; we are beholden to no foreign government. Be at peace. I believe that it was wrong of Mexico’s political elites to take sides in the election; they have forgotten the principles of nonintervention and the right of the people to self-determination. In any case, we will find strength through our unity in the face of any eventuality.
I call on the Mexican people to be at peace. We will forge ahead; there are no problems we can’t address because we will assert our right to sovereignty, whoever may occupy the White House.
I repeat: Mexico is a free, independent, and sovereign nation.
Without sabre rattling, we will assert our independence and our right to sovereignty.
We have nothing to fear. We shall forge ahead.
CHAPTER 1
A GANG OF THUGS
Iopen with a categorical assertion: Mexico’s crisis cannot be confronted without first addressing corruption and and the failure to prosecute people benefiting from it, which requires regime change and the establishment of a new political order, one that is democratic, that promotes the rule of law, that is humanist and distinctively honest. The Republic that exists today is a republic in name only, not a government by the pueblo and for the pueblo . The State has come to serve a rapacious minority and, as Tolstoy once wrote, a state that does not procure justice is no more than a pack of miscreants. This definition, that of a writer, not a pundit or theorist, has clarity and simplicity and comes closest to our present political reality. In Mexico the governing class constitutes a gang of plunderers that operate throughout the country. This may seem like an exaggeration, and one might argue that it’s always been this way, but the astounding dishonesty of the neoliberal period (from 1983 to present) is wholly unprecedented. It constitutes a qualitative shift in the disintegration of the country.
The system has been utterly corrupted. The political and economic powers feed off each other, and the theft of public goods has become their modus operandi. Corruption is no longer a matter of a few isolated instances, but a systematic practice. In the so-called stabilizing development period (1930s–80s), the government dared not privatize communal lands, forests, beaches, railroads, mines, electricity, and petroleum above all; in this bitter period of neoliberalism, they have dedicated themselves, as in the Porfiriato⁴ period, to handing over our firms and territory and public goods, and even functions of the State, to domestic and foreign entities. It’s no longer about individual acts of dereliction, nor a web of complicity at the expense of the public; now, feeding corruption has become the principal function of the State.
The politics of pillage—more specifically, the neoliberal model—is a set of dogmas and mantras asserting that privatization is the cure-all, the sole and perfect fix to the country’s economic and social issues. Though it may seem redundant, the Dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy states that privatization means to make what is public private. Quite literally, Transferring a business or public good to the private sector.
The heralds of neoliberalism call upon all sorts of falsehoods to justify this sacking. They exalt the myth of market supremacy; they assert that sovereignty is irrelevant in the face of globalization, that the State need not promote development or redistribute wealth, because wealth spreads when the elites prosper. But this is sophistry, because wealth isn’t water and doesn’t trickle down. Neoliberal propagandists have gone so far as to resurrect the old Porfirista wisdom that there will always be a wealthy elite, living in stark contrast to the vast majority, and even with every absurd justification at their disposal they still shirk responsibility for the State’s failure to provide for the people. Denying any right to justice, they condemn those born into poverty to die in poverty.
As neoliberalism spreads across the globe, this supposed new paradigm
has been used as armor behind which to plunder the country on a scale never before seen. The Washington Consensus took shape under Miguel de la Madrid’s administration (1982–88), but its grasp was strengthened under his successor, Carlos Salinas de Gortari (1988–94). During this period we saw the beginnings of a new legal framework, one that legalized pillage behind a rhetoric of selling off inefficiently run government entities. Though formally privatization bids were supposed to take place under the guise of fairness and transparency, it was clear from the start who the winners would be. One need only recall that Salinas, his brother Raúl, and the secretary of finance, Pedro Aspe, benefitted from this distribution of banks and other assets that had previously belonged to Mexico.
Thus, in thirteen months—from June 1991 to July 1992—and with an average of twenty business days per bank, 18 lending institutions were shuttered. In a mere five years—December 1988 to December of 1993—251 businesses were privatized, including Telmex, Mexicana de Aviación, Televisión Azteca, Siderúrgica Lázaro Cárdenas, Altos Hornos de México, Astilleros Unidos de Veracruz, Fertilizantes Mexicanos, as well as insurance providers, sugar mills, mines, and factories. The transfer of public goods to a select few wasn’t limited to banks and state-owned entities. Communal lands were also privatized, as were highways, ports, and airports. And with that, domestic and foreign business opportunities increased significantly for Pemex⁵ and the Federal Electricity Commission.
The economic system imposed under Salinas was perpetuated under Ernesto Zedillo, Vicente Fox, and Felipe Calderón, and the beneficiaries of Salinas’s spoils continued to accumulate not only wealth but political influence. Before long they became a political power in and of themselves, a power that operated beyond the reach of constitutionally bound institutions. It is these figures who determine the fate of our most pressing political questions of the day—the questions fiercely debated in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate; in the Supreme Court; the National Electoral Institute and Electoral Tribune; by the Attorney General; the Secretary of Finance; and the PRI and PAN⁶. What’s more, they enjoy unfettered control of the media.
These tycoons, quite understandably, are betting on the continuation of this state of affairs and have forestalled regime change through bribes and manipulation. A fruit of these efforts was the installation of Enrique Peña Nieto as president of Mexico. He’s one more puppet for the elite, a frivolous and irrelevant character. And yet this spineless, immoral, unpredictable sycophant has led the deterioration of the country in every facet of public life. Not only are we plagued by impoverishment and unemployment, but instability and insecurity are rampant. Decadence prospered because a new collective politics was not pursued; the regime instead doubled down on its grasp of neoliberal politics. In a mere two years Peña Nieto managed to impose a foreign agenda on a compliant populace. As Mexico’s elites conspired, so-called reforms
were enacted in the spheres of labor, education, economic policy, and energy. The country’s sovereignty and the pueblo’s integrity were violated, leaving frustration, chaos, and violence in their wake.
¡Oye, Trump! Speech 2
The First Day of Trump’s Presidency
Acuña City, Coahuila, January 20, 2017
Today, Donald Trump took office as president of the United States and launched yet another attack against those he considers foreigners, both at home and abroad.
I regret this uncomfortable new reality, but I don’t rule out the possibility of things improving for the sake of both our nations.
Our task is to try and persuade Trump, but at the same time, we must create the conditions to make him listen to reason.
Before the US elections, we were prudent and did not publicly favor any candidate or party; we held firmly to the principles of nonintervention and self-determination, but now we cannot stand idly by as US foreign policy seeks to encroach on the dignity and legitimate interests