April
5, 2005
Mexico on the Brink
By A.M.
Mora y Leon
CIA director
Porter Goss wasn't kidding when he put Mexico in with Venezuela,
Haiti, Bolivia and Nicaragua as the most unstable countries in
the hemisphere Right now, the potentially dangerous development
is political, and may affect us very tangibly in the U.S.
Here is the
political rundown:
Like much
of Latin America, there is a terrible leadership deficit in Mexico.
One thing's for sure - the next President of Mexico probably won't
come from President Vicente Fox's PAN party in the 2006 presidential
election. Fox has been nothing but a disappointment to Mexico's
voters - 'meet the new boss, same as the old boss' - is a common
assessment among Mexicans.
Fox won the
election five years ago promising to change Mexico, but has done
very little to change anything. Few free market reforms were undertaken,
scant new jobs were created, and in the grating dynamic of "reforms"
as they are executed by such 'third-way' regimes, GDP went up
in low single digits, based on the production of a few big companies
and government spending. New small companies were never formed.
The renewed mercantilism - or, in Latin America, the term is 'corporate
state' - in turn made the rich richer and the poor poorer.
And angrier.
There were
some bright spots in Mexico's economy for the already-rich or
skilled during the Fox years, but most poor Mexicans remained
shut out of the system. Lip service was paid to reforms, but new
opportunity for the poor was not the focus, and the jobs were
not delivered to those who needed them most. In Mexico, that group
comprises the majority.
As a substitute
for reform, Fox encouraged Mexicans to skip over the border to
the US, to take up life as illegal aliens - and send dollars back
to Mexico. Ten percent of Mexican voters now live in the US legally
or illegally, but they account for fifty percent of Mexico's purchasing
power. And they send home enough billions in foreign exchange
to make the government in Mexico very comfortable indeed. The
Interamerican Development Bank says they sent home $16.6 billion
in 2004, up from $10.5 billion in 2000, the year Fox was elected.
Fox has called these people 'heroes' - encouraging US banks to
accept Mexican identification cards to ease money transfers in
2002 and permitting his government to print out booklets advising
Mexicans how to get over the border illegally but safely by 2005.
But it's
no life to be an illegal alien. If you have ever seen the movie
El Norte about the plight of Guatemalan illegal aliens in Los
Angeles, you will understand why. The poverty, the exploitation
by the migrant rackets, the permanent underclass status, the ease
with which aliens can lose everything they've worked to build
if they are apprehended by law enforcement is heartbreaking. These
people are helpless.
Not only
that, in the case of Mexico, there are whole villages whose only
residents are women and children - all of the men have gone to
the US to work illegally - so the children grow up fatherless.
This is a huge price to pay just to get a job. No one should be
driven by circumstances to do this. And to have a cynical government
encouraging this kind of life so it can benefit by the dollar
remittances, which beef up foreign exchange reserves and permit
the government to finance itself without having to worry about
growing the tax base, is an outrage.
So what do
you do if you are a Mexican voter, soon to be offered a choice
of three candidates for election, one from the old discredited
PRI that ruled and ruined Mexico for 70 years, one from the disappointing
new third-way PAN that openly wants you to flee your homeland,
abandon your family and send home dollars, or one from a third
party in the wings, the ultra-left PRD party, which has a charismatic
mayor of Mexico City running for election on a "stand up for the
poor" platform of soup-kitchen spending and sticking it to the
US?
Meanwhile,
there's nobody comparable to an American Republican. There are
no wealth-creators, no Reagans; there are only these three socialist
candidates as your presidential choices.
It shouldn't
surprise anyone that you pick that third candidate if you are
a Mexican.
And this
reality makes everyone - the other two Mexican parties, the US,
and the rest of Latin America blanch. For Mexico, the high welfare
spending should kill off all potential job growth for everyone
except party bureaucrats. For the US, there's a potential Hugo
Chavez on its border, one who's already talking about an oil alliance
with Venezuela. Oil supplier number three teaming up with oil
supplier number four to stick it to the gringos sounds like $105
a barrel oil already. For Latin America, there's one more demagogue
ready to retard the region's growth by destroying Latin America's
largest economy. The danger is obvious to everyone.
But so is
the solution. Right now, Mexico's two other parties, PAN and PRI,
have conducted legal maneuvers to knock this third-party leftist
Mexican mayor out of the presidential race. They are prosecuting
him over some road violation, a very trivial technicality. And
that's pushed his popularity from 27% to 37% in the three-way
race already.
They just
may succeed in torpedoing his candidacy, but they aren't fooling
anyone into thinking it's just because they are interested in
law and order. By behaving this way, they are making Mexico's
bitter, fed-up population even angrier. It amounts to an insult
to democracy and contempt for their wishes. It may easily lead
to civil unrest, something which may be even worse than a Hugo
Chavez at our border.
What happens
when a political establishment tries to poison its Yushchenko?
Exile its Dalai Lama? Jail its Lech Walesa? The reality is, he
comes back stronger. That's what's about to happen in Mexico.
Be warned.
A.M.
Mora y Leon writes for The
American Thinker.
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