April 24, 2005 11:19 | by
Larry Birns and Sarah Schaffer
With a Freshly-Minted President, Ecuador Could be the Next Member
of Latin America's New Left Coalition
In a special session on Wednesday, 20th April, Ecuador's congress
voted unanimously to remove President Lucio Gutiérrez from
office, passing the leadership baton to Vice President Alfredo Palacio,
who conceivably will have the proper vision to get the job done.
Ecuador could become the next member of the new left movement that
is sweeping across South America if the local indigenous communities
are allowed to help fill the country's new political vacuum. Such
a move could spill over to Mexico in next year's presidential election,
further isolating Washington and forcing it to rely increasingly
on its Central American Banana Republic servitors. Ecuador represents
one more defeat for US Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriega's
Latin America policy.
Ecuadorian civil society has never had qualms about holding its
elected officials directly accountable. In the past decade alone,
the population of this small, poor South American country has toppled
three presidents for failing to deliver on promises of social justice,
economic and political development and increasing employment. In
a special session yesterday, following the call by more than 30,000
street protesters demanding President Lucio Gutiérrez's resignation
the day before, Ecuador's 100-member congress voted 62-0 to remove
him from the presidency. Gutiérrez himself is a former coup
leader as well as a retired army colonel and was elected president
in 2002. To his own destruction, Gutiérrez left behind a
string of broken promises as well as unconstitutional and irresponsible
actions that spiraled the country into a series of crises, marked
by increasingly violent clashes between protestors, supporters and
the police, reportedly leaving two killed.
The Road to Impeachment
In a flagrant assertion of illegal authority over the country's
judicial branch of government last December, Gutiérrez, with
the vital aid of now returned former president Abdalá Bucaram's
Roldosista party, had purged Ecuador's supreme court by a simple
majority vote, citing as his reason the court's strong bias against
him. Exacerbating the hostile mood of the population, the president
then replaced all but two of the 17 justices with pro-Gutiérrez
judges in order to block any effort to impeach him. Protesters in
Quito forced the by-then besieged President to backtrack on this
on Tuesday, announcing that he had decided to dismiss his own hand-picked
supreme court. Contrary to Gutiérrez's expectations however,
this action only instigated more turmoil for the country and inspired
a nationwide demonstration against him. With more than 30,000 protesters
taking to the streets in Quito calling for his resignation, and
the army refusing to come to his aide, the country's Congress yesterday
voted Gutiérrez out of office.
In an act of near desperation, Gutiérrez had looked to former
president Bucaram(who was overthrown in 1997 for being "mentally
unfit" to govern) for aid. Gutiérrez facilitated "El
Loco's" return to Ecuador from his self-exile in Panama by
having his loyalist supreme court judges void all corruption charges
against the quirky former president. In turn, Bucaram advised Gutiérrez
to declare a state of emergency and to dissolve congress so that
it could not impeach him. Bucaram's advice and his insistence that
Gutiérrez was another Hugo Chávez, however, came a
little too late to salvage the already mortally wounded presidency.
Ecuador's Future: Left, Right or What?
With no clear successor, Gutiérrez's ouster has left a gaping
hole which his estranged vice president, Alfredo Palacio, will have
to fill, at least for now. While it is difficult to predict the
future political course of the country, more social reforms may
be imminent, with Palacio being prepared to move to the left to
consolidate his leadership. Clearly the population is tired of watching
the business of government being run as usual.
South American specialist Dr. Heather Williams of Pomona College,
California, believes that the country's economy is basically fuelled
by foreign direct investment which does not generate the necessary
new jobs, and "while the outside world sees steady economic
growth, average Ecuadorians have not seen any improvement in their
lives." From almost the very beginning of his vice presidency,
Palacio criticized Gutiérrez for being too beholden to the
IMF and the "Washington Consensus," and attacked him for
ignoring issues of social justice that were of vital concern for
the 65 percent of the population who live at or below the poverty
line.
Ecuador's Hugo Chávez?
Gutiérrez was supposed to be Ecuador's version of Venezuelan
President Hugo Chávez, but his populist platform quickly
evaporated after he discarded all plans to bring about change for
Ecuadorians by turning to the tactics favoured by neoliberal 'reformers'.
While Ecuador's small traditional oligarchy would certainly like
to regain control of the country, a number of leftist reformist
groups maintain a strong foothold. One of these is Democracia Popular,
which advocates a communitarian socialist economic platform and
is the nation's largest political party, having won 35 percent of
the congressional seats in the 1998 election. The party can be expected
to back Palacio until he leaves office in 2007. However, few strong
individual party leaders have emerged either from the oligarchy,
from traditional political parties or those determined to transform
the malfunctioning 'caudillo' system. At the present time, neither
Ecuador's legislative factions nor the anti-Gutiérrez protesters
have been able to look beyond the president's ouster toward authentic
governing alternatives.
If newly installed Alfredo Palacio is able to mend Ecuador's constitution
in order to respond adequately to the constellation of political
forces to be found in the country today, including dissenting indigenous
communities, he would be looked upon as a hero. At the very least,
Palacio would be wise to reintegrate the indigenous communities,
which were essential to Gutiérrez's coming to power and instrumental
in his eventual defeat. One certain loser is Assistant Secretary
of State Roger Noriega whose rightwing policies have alienated the
leadership of Latin America, with the region's pro-U.S. faction
being reduced to little more than the Central American Banana Republics
of Costa Rica, El Salvador and Honduras. Within living memory, the
U.S. has never been as isolated in the region as it is today throughout
Latin America.
This analysis was prepared by Council on Hemispheric Affairs Director
Larry Birns and COHA Research Associate Sarah Schaffer, additional
research provided by COHA Research Associate Alicia Asper. The Council
on Hemispheric Affairs, founded in 1975, is an independent, non-profit,
non-partisan, tax-exempt research and information organization.
For more information, please see our web page at www.coha.org
See also:
http://www.spectrezine.org/LatinAmerica/Dupret2.htm
http://www.spectrezine.org/LatinAmerica/arms.htm