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View Full Version : Dirty Tricks in Costa Rica Capitalist "Democracy"



cyu
8th October 2007, 18:35
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/10/06/4356/

Threats, Dirty Tricks, Fake Polls: Costa Rica Votes Under Duress on Free Trade
by Mark Weisbrot

No country has ever had a national referendum on a free trade agreement before - which is not surprising since most of these agreements wouldnt be approved by the citizenry. Bill Clinton couldnt even get a majority of his own party in Congress to vote for NAFTA in 1993, and its been downhill for these types of agreements ever since.

So Costa Rica - the regions richest and most democratic country will be setting a precedent on Sunday with its referendum on CAFTA (the Central America Free Trade Agreement), which was negotiated in 2004.

Costa Ricans might want to watch out for a repeat of presidential elections last year, where current President Oscar Arias squeezed out a narrow (1.1 percent) victory over progressive candidate Ottn Sols, who criticized CAFTA in his campaign. In that campaign, erroneous polls reported by the media showed Arias with a large lead of 11-19 percentage points. This led to a record low turnout at the polls. Costa Rica could very well have a different president, and a different trade policy, if not for the impact of this false polling.

The latest polls in Costa Rica give an advantage to the yes vote, but things have been moving rapidly towards No since an embarrassing high-level government memo was leaked a few weeks ago. The memo, as the Los Angeles Times described it, outlined a campaign of dirty tricks intended to sway voters. This included telling mayors that their cities would not get a penny from the government for the next three years if they did not deliver a majority of voters for CAFTA. In the words of the memo, the government also needed to stimulate fear among the voters, including fear of the loss of jobs.

The Bush Administration joined the campaign to stimulate fear, with the U.S. Ambassador threatening that Costa Rica could lose some of it existing access to U.S. markets if the voters reject CAFTA. This led US Congresswoman Linda Snchez to remind the Ambassadors boss, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, that such interference in Costa Ricas electoral politics violates US, Costa Rican, and international law. Senate Majority leader Harry Reid and House Majority leader Nancy Pelosi also weighed in with a letter stating clearly that Costa Ricas access to U.S. markets under the Caribbean Basin Initiative are not conditioned on acceptance of any trade agreement.

In fact, the threats from the US government, and repeated by the Costa Rican proponents of CAFTA, are empty. There is only a small portion of Costa Ricas trade preferences that Congress would have to renew next year. It is politically inconceivable that the Democratic majority in Congress - which voted against CAFTA when it was approved here - would move to punish Costa Rica for its voters having rejected the same agreement.

Despite the intimidation, Costa Ricans brought a record 100,000 people (equivalent to seven million in the US) into the streets last weekend for a No vote. They have good reasons to reject CAFTA: they do not want their farmers wiped out by subsidized grains and other agricultural products from the U.S. They also have a strong environmental movement that vehemently objects to provisions in CAFTA - like NAFTA - that would give corporations new legal rights to challenge environmental laws. And Mexicos post-NAFTA economic performance - about a third of its pre-1980 growth - is less than inspiring.

Of course free trade is a marketing slogan rather than a description of the actual policy that is up for a vote. These agreements - including CAFTA increase some of the most costly barriers to international trade (such as in pharmaceuticals) while lowering others (e.g. for subsidized US agricultural exports).

A No vote in Costa Rica would deal another blow to the Bush Administrations foreign commercial policy, which has already suffered numerous defeats: including the collapse of their proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas; the stalled talks at the World Trade Organization (WTO); and the administrations loss of fast track authority to negotiate new agreements with minimal congressional input.

Costa Rica is one of the richest countries in Latin America, and has a well-developed democracy. That democracy will be put to a new test with this referendum.

Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, D.C.

MarxSchmarx
9th October 2007, 03:26
The sad fact is Costa Rica is probably more like the U$A than her neighbors. That is, her wages are comparatively higher, her people are better educated, and her social infrastructure leaps and bounds ahead of all except maybe Panama. In other words, Costa Rica has so much to lose and little to gain by adopting this pact.

This means that Costa Rican businesses have much to gain from continuing to exploit "Nicas" both domestically and abroad. Unfortunately the last couple of decades, the Costa Rican media has done a fine job convincing Ticos that they have more in common with Gringoes than those warring barbarians at their gates.The Costa Rican elite think if they could kiss Tio Sam's ass long enough, their country will FINALLY look like the "Switzerland" they claim it is.

Once again, a small gang of Latin American hoodlums manage to fool their people some of the time. Once again, part of Latin America feels its future is with El Norte, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

The fact of the matter is their "we're 1st world" ideology is based on foreign debt. When their electronics jobs go to Honduras, when Tio Sam continues to not lower tarrifs on sugar, when you get a stern warning about that Venezuelan oil your importing, perhaps those shitheads in Costa Rica who voted for this piece of crap will wake up and realize what they have done.

CAFTA is a joke. It's too bad there wasn't a referendum on joining Mercosur, much less the Warsaw Pact.