Students protest Peña Nieto Photo: Carlo González, jornada.com |
The Mexican version of
the old Soviet Politburo is poised to make a comeback, with potentially
disastrous consequences for North America. In 2000, the world hailed the
end of more than 70 years of rule by the Institutional Revolutionary Party,
or PRI, as a sign of democratic transition. Today, the PRI's
presidential candidate in the July 1 election, Enrique Peña Nieto,
threatens to bring back the authoritarian ways of the past.
The PRI has not cleaned up its act
or modernized over the last 12 years. To the contrary, it has deepened
its networks of corruption and illegality in the territories it still
controls. The 10 states where the PRI has never lost power are among the
most violent, underdeveloped and corrupt in the country. In these
states, democratic transition and accountability are exotic concepts and
the local governors rule like despotic feudal lords.
For example, the state of Veracruz
is one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists.
Recently, four journalists were assassinated in a single week. In
January, officials close to the governor were detained in an airport
with a suitcase containing nearly $2 million in cash, supposedly for an
advertising campaign.
The U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration is investigating alleged complicity between three former
governors of Tamaulipas and some of the most violent drug cartels inMexico.
The former governor of Coahuila, Humberto Moreira, has been embroiled
in an enormous corruption scandal that left his state $3 billion in
debt, allegedly involving falsified government documents and complex
front corporations in Texas.
The state of Mexico, where Peña
Nieto just finished a six-year stint as governor, is no exception.
Homicide and poverty rates have skyrocketed and "femicides" — targeted
killing of women — are common. A recent study by scholar Guadalupe
Hernandez found that millions in government "social spending" went
unaccounted for while Peña Nieto was governor, most likely to illegally
fund his presidential campaign. Independent civil society groups rank
the state at the bottom in competitiveness and tops in corruption.
Peña Nieto is a wolf in sheep's
clothing. He hides behind a telegenic smile and sharp attire, but he
represents Mexico's old corrupt political class. Last week, for example,
a high-ranking general apparently close to Peña Nieto and his group of
politicians from Mexico state was arrested on organized-crime charges...
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John M. Ackerman
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