Herald-Tribune

Vote for Trump — and kill democracy in Latin America

- Tim Padgett Guest columnist

Donald Trump’s recent rally in Hialeah – and a nearby forum on Latin American democracy hours before – are reminders of the toxic effect he has on constituti­onalism in the Western Hemisphere.

Let me take you first to the gathering you probably weren’t aware of. In Coral Gables, Florida Internatio­nal University and the Fundación Internacio­nal para la Libertad – a think tank founded by Peruvian Nobel literature laureate Mario Vargas Llosa – cohosted a forum on the democratic challenges facing the Americas.

I was a panelist for the session on democratic backslidin­g in Latin America. One theme that seemed to emerge from our punditry was that military epaulettes have been replaced by political neckties –or, in the case of Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, a backward baseball cap.

What I mean is while Latin America has broken its addiction to the military dictatorsh­ips of the past century, democracy there faces a new, more civilian and more insidious threat in this century. Namely: populist leader after leader, party after party, left and right, who are trashing democratic constituti­onalism so they can rule, sometimes brutally, without limits.

From Tijuana to Tierra del Fuego, the showcases are legion.

There’s leftist Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who spends each day trying to subvert his country’s judicial system to accommodat­e his power grabs. Or the right-wing Pacto de Corruptos oligarchy next door in Guatemala, which is raping that nation’s judicial integrity to prevent anti-corruption President-elect Bernardo Arévalo from taking office in January.

Or, in Nicaragua, 72-year-old Vice President Rosario Murillo – the sinister power behind her soulless despot-husband Daniel Ortega’s leftist throne – who just put her own country’s Supreme Court under her thumb. Or socialist tyrant Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela. Or reactionar­y former Brazilian President/dictator wannabe Jair Bolsonaro.

Or 42-year-old Bukele in El Salvador, who uses a hip, TikTok generation image to hide his retro-authoritar­ian schemes. Such as: getting his lapdog Supreme Court to toss the Constituti­on like a half-eaten pupusa into the dumpster, so he can run for a second consecutiv­e term in February.

A new Trump presidency would help Latin American populists normalize the contempt for constituti­onalism that’s leaching into the region’s groundwate­r.

Our panel did see signs of hope – such as the way the Brazilian and Mexican high courts have stood up to the likes of Bolsonaro and López Obrador. But we also recognized another grim problem: the U.S. itself hasn’t exactly been a model of democratic institutio­nalism in recent years.

Which brings me to former President Trump’s raucous Hialeah rally. It came on the heels of media reports that if Trump wins back the White House next year, he plans to twist the U.S. justice system to unleash vengeance on his opponents while giving him autocratic reign.

And he leads in the polls, a man who, as President, spurred his unhinged cult into sacking the U.S. Capitol to keep him in power after he lost the 2020 election.

If he regains the presidency, he will be the model for the Bukeles and Murillos and others – he will inspire them to normalize the contempt for constituti­onalism that keeps leaching into Latin America’s government­al groundwate­r.

Tim Padgett is the Americas Editor for WLRN, the National Public Radio station in Miami.

 ?? STANLEY ESTRADA, TNS ?? Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele delivers a press conference at a hotel in San Salvador on Feb. 28, 2021.
STANLEY ESTRADA, TNS Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele delivers a press conference at a hotel in San Salvador on Feb. 28, 2021.
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