Mexico’s ‘Bernie Sanders’ wins presidential election


This 1 July 2018 AFP video says about itself:

Mexico’s next president, anti-establishment leftist Andrés Manuel López Obrador, arrives for his victory speech after winning a resounding election victory.

From Common Dreams in the USA:

Sunday, July 01, 2018

Mexico’s ‘Bernie Sanders‘ Wins in a Huge Historic Landslide With Mandate to Reshape the Nation

AMLO is definitely the Bernie Sanders of Mexico.

Progressive anti-Trump candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador has been elected president of Mexico on Sunday in an apparent landslide victory.

Exit polls gave AMLO, as his supporters call him, ­a huge lead over his two closest competitors, and both of them conceded the race shortly after polls closed on Sunday night. Official results were due to be announced later on Sunday night with AMLO supporters expected to flood Mexico City’s main plaza, the Zócalo, to celebrate his anticipated victory.

This 1 July 2018 AFP video says about itself:

Mexico’s next president Andres Manuel López Obrador gives speech in front of emotional supporters on the capture’s emblematic Zócalo Square to celebrate his victory.

The Common Dreams article continues:

The New York Times reports:

“Mr. López Obrador’s win puts a leftist leader at the helm of Latin America’s second largest economy for the first time in decades, a prospect that has filled millions of Mexicans with hope — and the nation’s elites with trepidation.

“The outcome represents a clear rejection of the status quo in the nation, which for the last quarter century has been defined by a centrist vision and an embrace of globalization that many Mexicans feel has not served them.”

Journalist Gwynne Dyer, writing on Common Dreams Sunday:

“It will also annoy Washington greatly. López Obrador is promising that all 50 Mexican consulates in the United States will help to defend migrants caught up in the American legal system. “Trump and his advisers speak of the Mexicans the way Hitler and the Nazis referred to the Jews, just before undertaking the infamous persecution and the abominable extermination”, López Obrador wrote just after the Great Distractor’s election.” It’s quite likely that within a year the US intelligence services will be tasked with the job of finding ways to bring him down.

John Feffer writing on Common Dreams Friday wrote:

“AMLO is definitely the Bernie Sanders of Mexico. He was the mayor of a city, like Sanders, though Mexico City is quite a bit bigger than Burlington, Vermont. He governed in the same pragmatic way that Bernie did, often partnering with the business community. As Jon Lee Anderson writes in The New Yorker, AMLO “succeeded in creating a pension fund for elderly residents, expanding highways to ease congestion, and devising a public-private scheme, with the telecommunications magnate Carlos Slim, to restore the historic downtown.” The latter is reminiscent of Sanders’s deals to revive Burlington’s waterfront.”

The Guardian reported Sunday night:

Leading members of Latin America’s left voiced hope Amlo’s election might revive the region’s rapidly ebbing ‘pink tide’. “It will signal the return of progressive winds to Latin America!” Gleisi Hoffmann, the president of Brazil’s embattled Worker’s party, predicted.

Brazil’s impeached former president Dilma Rousseff said an AMLO win would “not just be a victory for Mexico but for all of Latin America”.

Argentina’s former president, Cristina Kirchner, tweeted: “Andrés Manuel López Obrador represents hope, not just for Mexico but for the entire region.”

Statement by Jeremy Corbyn on the Mexican election result: here.

See also here.

AMLO ASCENDANT Andrés Manuel López Obrador has won the Mexican presidency in a landslide victory, according to exit polls. The 64 -year-old leftist promises to rein in widespread corruption and fight poverty. [HuffPost]

How the ‘Bernie of Mexico’ won the presidency: here.

Mexico’s Obrador promises ‘transformation’ of corruption and violence-riddled country. Jeremy Corbyn praises ‘turning point for the dispossessed’ after president-elect’s landslide win: here.

Mexico’s election deals devastating blow to old ruling parties: here.

Andrés Manuel López Obrador inaugurated as new president of Mexico: here.

21 thoughts on “Mexico’s ‘Bernie Sanders’ wins presidential election

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  2. Saturday, 1 September 2018

    Napoleon Gomez returns!

    INDUSTRIALL global union marked a historic moment as Mexican union leader, Napoleón Gómez Urrutia, returned to his country after 12 years in exile to be sworn in as senator, in a ceremony in Mexico City on 29 August.

    Napoleón Gómez Urrutia, president and general secretary of the Mexican Union of Miners and Metalworkers, known as Los Mineros, was included on the winning ticket of the Mexican President-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador and his National Regeneration Movement (Morena) party in the general elections on 1 July.

    Gómez has been a titular member of IndustriALL’s Executive Committee since it was founded in 2012 and IndustriALL affiliates around the world have united behind him and the campaign for democratic unions in Mexico.

    IndustriALL general secretary, Valter Sanches, as well as IndustriALL affiliates, the United Steelworkers (USW) International President, Leo W. Gerard from the USA and Canada, and Len McCluskey from UK and Ireland trade union, Unite, were among those present at the ceremony on 29 August.

    The unions have been unwavering in their support of Napoleón Gómez and Los Mineros, even before he was compelled to leave Mexico. Valter Sanches said it was a source of great pride to have an elected compañero as part of the new government, which promises to take up the cause of workers.

    Speaking before the ceremony, he said: ‘To all of our brothers and sisters who have fought throughout the years, and for those who have shown international solidarity around the world, today is a day to celebrate because solidarity has triumphed again.’

    The story of Napoleon’s exile begins with terrible tragedy on 19 February 2006, after an explosion ripped through Grupo México’s Pasta de Conchos coal mine in the northern state of Coahuila, trapping 65 miners hundreds of metres beneath the surface.

    Unlike the San José mine collapse four years later in Chile, when 33 miners were miraculously found alive after 17 days trapped underground, rescue efforts at Pasta de Conchos were stopped after only five days.

    Grupo México and the Mexican government even disconnected the electricity to the mine to stop the search and hide the safety violations that could incriminate the company. This was before they knew the miners were dead.

    Before the disaster, Napoleon Gomez, whose union represented miners at Pasta de Conchos, had already warned of the dangerous conditions in the mines, and asked that production be stopped until conditions improved. Now it was too late. Almost twelve years later, the bodies of 63 of the 65 miners remain in the mine and the Mexican government has failed to investigate or prosecute those responsible.

    Following the tragedy, Gómez strongly condemned Grupo México and the Mexican government, accusing them of industrial homicide for neglecting to correct more than 40 health and safety violations in the mine.

    In retaliation for his outspoken comments, the Mexican government removed Gómez as union leader and imposed Elías Morales as acting general secretary of Los Mineros. The move sparked international outcry and a global campaign was launched by IndustriALL’s predecessor organisations, in support of Gómez and union autonomy in Mexico.

    After receiving death threats for criticising Grupo México, and under increasing oppression from the authorities, Gómez and his family fled Mexico in early March 2006 with the aid of the United Steelworkers.

    On 18 and 19 March 2006, Los Mineros rank and file membership voted overwhelmingly in favour of Gómez as their general secretary, renouncing Morales. Gómez was then persecuted through the courts on sham charges of corruption of Los Mineros funds. Gómez successfully contested the accusations eleven times until a federal court finally put an end to the case, denouncing the charges as baseless and unconstitutional.

    Los Mineros leaders were targeted and imprisoned by authorities, including Juan Linares, who was illegally incarcerated for more than two years. A week of action by global unions and their affiliates was a determining factor in securing his release from prison in 2011.

    In 2013, Gómez was finally taken off Interpol’s red alert list of wanted suspects and the Mexican government was heavily criticised for using Interpol for its own political purposes. It meant Gómez was able to leave Canada, where he had taken refuge with his family under protection of the USW, for the first time since 2006 and attend a meeting of IndustriALL’s Executive Committee in Geneva, Switzerland.

    In May 2014, Napoleón Gómez was awarded the prestigious Arthur Svensson International Prize for trade union rights for his leading role in the struggle for democratic unions in Mexico. In the years that followed the Pasta de Conchas tragedy, the government continued its attacks on Los Mineros by freezing the union’s financial accounts, imprisoning the union’s leaders on false charges, attempting to eliminate the union’s legal right to strike, and using police and military force in violent attacks on workers, resulting in the deaths of at least four union activists and injuring many more.

    Yet despite this, Los Mineros has continued to be the most successful trade union in Mexico. Gómez successfully concluded collective bargaining agreements from abroad negotiating the highest wage increases of any union in the country.

    Gómez, who has been unanimously reelected as leader of Los Mineros multiple times, says that one of his first tasks when he returns to Mexico is to reopen the investigation into the Pasta de Conchos tragedy.

    He will also lead the fight against protection contracts in Mexico, (negotiated between corrupt unions and employers behind workers’ backs), as well as other violations of trade union rights that form the basis of IndustriALL’s complaint to the International Labour Organisation.

    • Grupo Mexico has again used private security forces to evict a group of workers and former workers from the Cananea mine. The workers were protesting to demand benefits owed to them by the company.

    Los Mineros, affiliated to IndustriALL Global Union, said that some demonstrators were injured in the early morning of 21 August and others were detained and taken to the local public prosecutor’s office.

    ‘Workers and former workers were violently evicted by the company’s private security forces, armed with clubs and weapons only used by the army, just because they were protesting about the non-payment of their share in profits and other benefits owed to them by Grupo Mexico,’ explained the president of Los Mineros and joint regional president of IndustriALL, Napoleón Gómez Urrutia.

    The workers have been protesting for a month on the railway lines that give access to the mine. They are calling on the Grupo Mexico consortium and its owner, Germán Feliciano Larrea Mota Velasco, to pay them what the company has owed them for ten years and to improve workplace safety.

    https://wrp.org.uk/news/14632

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