A coup in Bolivia has forced President Evo Morales to step down, fulfilling predictions in a Labor South post last week and in an earlier post that neoliberal forces will not tolerate a social uprising against global capital without intervention.
Amid intense and often violent protests and strong pressure from his nation's military, Morales agreed this weekend to step down rather than see Bolivia plunge even deeper into crisis. He had just won another term in office in a contested election. A new election is expected. The coup has been condemned by leaders in Argentina and other Latin American nations as well as by British labor leader Jeremy Corbyn and others. Many see the coup as a blow to democracy and believe it was U.S.-backed, which wouldn't be the first time the Great Yankee to the north has interfered directly in the politics of nations to its south. Below is last week's post:
I teach a course at the University of Mississippi on “Documentary and Social Issues”, and today we finished watching Barbara Kopple’s 1976 classic Harlan County U.S.A, the tale of the long and bloody struggle of unionized Kentucky coal miners to get company owners to give them a fair contract that ensures fair wages and good safety conditions.
Amid intense and often violent protests and strong pressure from his nation's military, Morales agreed this weekend to step down rather than see Bolivia plunge even deeper into crisis. He had just won another term in office in a contested election. A new election is expected. The coup has been condemned by leaders in Argentina and other Latin American nations as well as by British labor leader Jeremy Corbyn and others. Many see the coup as a blow to democracy and believe it was U.S.-backed, which wouldn't be the first time the Great Yankee to the north has interfered directly in the politics of nations to its south. Below is last week's post:
I teach a course at the University of Mississippi on “Documentary and Social Issues”, and today we finished watching Barbara Kopple’s 1976 classic Harlan County U.S.A, the tale of the long and bloody struggle of unionized Kentucky coal miners to get company owners to give them a fair contract that ensures fair wages and good safety conditions.
The lesson in the film is
that the fight goes on even after a battle victory because the other side is
fighting a war, and it will never have a change of heart and deal fairly
without intense pressure from working people.
The same can be said in
regard to the recent strikes by the United Auto Workers and school teachers in
Chicago that forced both corporate and government leaders to the bargaining
table. What came out of those bargaining sessions wasn’t completely
satisfactory to all the strikers but the protests—and that’s essentially what a
strike is--did force a resolution and compromise—if only for the time being. As
those Harlan County miners from back in the 1970s would tell you, keep
vigilant. The other side will always be looking for a sign of weakness.
It’s a lesson well heeded
today, too, in Latin America, where protests are rising against the neoliberal
policies of the U.S. government, Wall Street, International Monetary Fund, and
World Bank that have forced governments to strip away social programs and
worker rights as part of the “austerity” needed to repay the giant loans owed
these institutions. In other words, adopt a Social Darwinist capitalism or
else.
People have had enough of
it. They’ve taken to the streets in Chile to protest the regime of billionaire
Sebastian PiƱera and a recent hike in subway fares that is most punitive to
workers, the straw that broke the camel’s back. The slashing of fuel subsidies
in President Lenin Moreno’s Equador also has led to huge protests that have
rocked the nation. Haitians are in the streets as well to protest political corruption in that country. Bolivian voters recently put anti-neoliberal Evo Morales
back in office for another term, a protest in itself at the ballot box. Morales has dramatically reduced poverty in his country and become a symbol of hope particularly for the nation's indigenous groups.
And, following up on an earlier
Labor South post, Peronist Alberto
Fernandez and his running mate and former president Christina Kirchner defeated
neoliberal Mauricio Macri in that country's recent election, a slap in the face to
Macri’s own austerity policies and utter allegiance to the financial interests
further north that have long kept his nation in bondage.
Latin America is swinging
left again, thank goodness, but it must remain vigilant. The eyes of the Big
Yankee regime to the north are watching. The sordid history of the United
States’ policies in Latin America stands ready to be repeated. A nation itself
founded in revolution against the foreign power that controlled it has become
the most powerful defender of such control in its relations to countries to its
south.
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