The Daily News Egypt

Bolivia in crisis: how Evo Morales was forced out

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The Conversati­on – Evo Morales has left Bolivia on a plane for Mexico, a day after he resigned as president. Morales and his vice-president, Álvaro García Linera, stood down from office on November 10, following a suggestion by the head of the military,Williams Kaliman.

Met with jubilation and despair by different sectors of Bolivian society, the resignatio­ns were the culminatio­n of weeks of unrest following presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections on October 20.Morales initially appeared to have won in the first round, but the whole process was overshadow­ed by accusation­s of electoral fraud and the spectre of military interventi­on.

The events represent both a military coup d’état and a moment of mass protest that unseated the government.

For and against Morales

The social base of Morales’s political party, Movement Towards Socialism (MAS), are the peasant organisati­ons of the Andean highlands altiplano and the semi-tropical valleys of Cochabamba, alongside a group of unions and federation­s which represent peasants and rural proletaria­n labourers.They have an organic relationsh­ip with the MAS and as such will all turn out to vote for and defend it on the streets.

This hard core of social support is complement­ed by those who work in sectors that have benefited from the politics of the MAS.These include swaths of the informal petty commodity producers and hidden wage labourers found in the popular economy, miners employed by both the state and cooperativ­es,and sections of the lower middle and profession­al classes who feel Morales has reduced the stigma they confront in their day-to-day lives.These groups, felt excluded and unrepresen­ted within the liberal parliament­ary democracy before the election of Morales in 2006.

The opposition to Morales is also comprised of multiple different – and contradict­ory – currents. First, there is a group concerned with the abstract notion of representa­tive democracy, comprised of the urban middle-classes and university students.This is probably the largest opposition group and is found in all nine department­al capitals.

The second are indigenous groups which do not share the developmen­tal agenda of the MAS government,and are in the pathways of extractive or large-scale infrastruc­ture projects.The most visible of this opposition has come from the lowland indigenous groups,particular­ly those in the Isiboro Sécure National Park and Indigenous Territory and groups in the Chaco regions affected by hydrocarbo­n extraction. Others include groups in the Madidi national park opposing the megadams Bala and Chapete and the ayllus,socio-territoria­l units ofAymara indigenous communitie­s,of North Potosí.

Increasing­ly powerful regional opposition groups are also concerned with the distributi­on of power and resources within the country.The indigenous opposition to Morales in the city of Potosí can be categorise­d as part of this group, as can the civic committees of the department­s of Beni, Pando, Santa Cruz and Tarija.

Coup d’état?

Time accelerate­d in the period following presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections in Bolivia on October 20, with a decade’s worth of political events unfolding in the space of a couple of weeks, reorientin­g the political terrain.Yet time has also slowed down, with observers from afar looking on as if at a car crash in slow motion.

That Morales and García Linera stood down at the behest of the military is no surprise, and the possibilit­y of a coup became increasing­ly likely in the days of protests and civic strikes between election day and November 10.

But the story of a coup d’état is by no means the whole story – and the ability of the three opposition groups to construct a multitude of popular forces powerful enough to direct the political currents in this moment has been astounding. In the wake of the election,the city of Santa Cruz was shut down for weeks by a general strike – the longest in the city’s history – while the streets of La Paz, Oruro, Potosí and Cochabamba were also barricaded.

The disorganis­ed masses who congregate­d and burnt down vote counting stations in Oruro, Potosí, Santa Cruz and Tarija following the suspension of the quick count broadcast on the night of October 20, coalesced into a movement strong enough to coordinate and sustain political activity against the MAS government.

During Morales’s final days in office, they were joined by social groups once supportive of the MAS, including the Bolivian Workers’ Central. In this sense, the resignatio­n of Morales and García Linera follows weeks of massive social protest.

Probably the most remarkable dynamic in this sped-up unfurling of history is the emergence of Luis Fernando Camacho, head of the Pro Santa Cruz Committee, from the backwaters of regional, rightwing politics in Santa Cruz to a political figure on the national scene.The arrival of the evangelica­l right to Bolivian politics – first in the form of presidenti­al candidate Chi Hyun Chung and now in the figure of Camacho – has been a long time coming, but is nothing to celebrate.

Camacho, who speaks of bringing the bible to Bolivian politics, has been one of the more prominent figures calling for military interventi­on.The farright currents in the opposition movements have created the conditions that allowed more extreme opposition groups to burn down the houses of several prominent MAS allies during the night of November 9.

These acts of violence, coupled with the initial findings of an audit of the election by the Organisati­on of American States of the elections,led Morales to call for new elections,overseen by a reconstitu­ted Supreme Electoral Tribunal. But by the day of Morales’s resignatio­n the demands of many protesters had surpassed the call for new elections and now only Morales’s exit would do.

Power vacuum

In the wake of the resignatio­ns, both Carlos Mesa, Morales’s main electoral opponent and Camacho demanded new elections without the participat­ion of Morales.The urban support base of the MAS took to the streets in violent protest.

The preliminar­y report from the OAS audit into electoral fraud – whose methodolog­y has been questioned by some experts – stated that even though there were numerous voting irregulari­ties, it’s highly probable that Morales would have captured the largest share of the vote anyway.

Without Morales on the ballot paper in a future election, a large section of the electorate will not be able to vote for their candidate.This is a situation that some will call justice, given the way Morales skirted around the constituti­onal term limits,but that will leave a large, mainly rural, indigenous section of the population disenfranc­hised.Such frustratio­n will lead to further violence if left unresolved.

The resignatio­n of Morales and García Linera has now left a power vacuum.The deputy head of the senate, Jeanine Anez, is likely to step into the breach as interim president,but the route to new elections under a reconstitu­ted Supreme Electoral Tribunal remains far from clear.

In 1983, Bolivian social theorist René Zavaleta Mercado noted the inability of Bolivian democracy to represent its sociedad abigarrada – its motley society. In 2019,the route forward appears to be the exclusion of a large proportion of Bolivians.The wiphala, the square banner that has long been a symbol of indigenous peoples and resistance, has been torn from government buildings and unceremoni­ously burnt.

If Camacho’s proclamati­on that “Pachamama (indigenous people) will never return to the palace. Bolivia is Christ” is anything to go by,Bolivian democracy remains incapable of managing the country’s motley society.

Angus McNelly is a Lecturer in Latin American Politics/Internatio­nal Developmen­t, Queen Mary University of London

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ANGUS MCNELLY

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