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View Full Version : "Bishop for the poor" wins Paraguay presidential election



cyu
21st April 2008, 19:43
Not exactly amazingly good news, but better than a pro-capitalist ideologue anyway.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7357874.stm
Opposition victorious in Paraguay

Opposition supporters celebrate on the streets

Former Roman Catholic bishop Fernando Lugo has won Paraguay's presidential election, ending more than six decades of rule by the Colorado Party.

With results declared in most polling stations, Mr Lugo has 41% of the vote.

His main rival, Blanca Ovelar of the Colorado Party, has 31% and former army chief Lino Oviedo 22%.

The BBC's Gary Duffy in the capital, Asuncion, says many wanted a leadership change to help confront the poverty and unemployment rife in the country.

Mr Lugo brought together leftist unions, indigenous people and poor farmers into a coalition to form the centre-left Patriotic Alliance for Change.

Celebrating change

Observers say that the man often described as the "bishop for the poor", is a virtual political novice, best known for his advocacy of land reform and calls to renegotiate an energy treaty with neighbouring Brazil.

Speaking to his supporters at his campaign headquarters, Mr Lugo said the result showed that little people could also win and that this was the Paraguay he had dreamt about - a country for everyone.

"I invite Paraguayans of all political types, even the ones who don't share our ideals, to help this country that was once great be great again," he told the cheering crowd.

Our correspondent says that jubilant supporters of Mr Lugo packed the streets of the capital, waving banners and singing songs, as it became clear not only that he had won, but that the victory would be respected.

Blanca Ovelar was the Colorado Party's first female candidate

Ms Ovelar, whose campaign to become the first woman president had suffered from internal party divisions, acknowledged defeat, and wished the country "a time of reconciliation" and "joint reconstruction".

Sitting President Nicanor Duarte hailed the democratic process: "For the first time in our history, one party will transfer power to another without a coup, without bloodshed and without fighting among brothers," he told a news conference.

Challenges ahead

Mr Lugo's victory brings to an end one of the longest periods of continuous rule by any party in the world - the Colorado Party has been in power since 1947.

"This is the first time in my life that I have witnessed a power change in my country and so has my mother in her 60s," Oliver, a resident of Asuncion, told the BBC news website. "Sixty-one years is too many for any party to remain in power."

The switch in power is also the latest in a series of election triumphs by leftist, or centre-left, leaders in South America.

But Mr Lugo has rejected accusations from Mr Duarte that he will follow the style of leftist leaders in Bolivia and Venezuela once in office.

Mr Duarte had warned that what he called agitators from Venezuela and Ecuador were trying to meddle in the poll.

Our correspondent says the celebrations will last well into the night in Asuncion, but there seems little doubt that the challenges facing the new president when he takes office in August will be enormous.

Inequality and corruption are persistent problems and poverty remains widespread, particularly in the rural areas, with many are forced to leave the country in search of work.

Dust Bunnies
21st April 2008, 23:35
Wow, lets just hope this Bishop will help the poor as Jesus did.

Cheung Mo
22nd April 2008, 03:31
Jesus introduced two ideas to the myths of the Middle East: Hell and an exclusive path to salvation. How the fuck does this help the poor. So he performed a few miracles. Alvaro Noboa gave a few poor people computers and appliances while trying to make Ecuador into a bigger reactionary banana republic than ever.

Kami
22nd April 2008, 03:52
well, supposedly jebus told the rich to give their possessions to the poor. A fairly progressive fellow for his age. Also, those myths were there long before him; heard of Judaism?

Doesn't change the fact he's dead 2000 years, and fairly irrelivant to todays life ^^

cyu
22nd April 2008, 20:26
The following biblical quote sounds like communism to me (though religious communism as opposed to atheist communism):

The community of believers were of one heart and one mind. None of them ever claimed anything as his own; rather, everything was held in common. With power the apostles bore witness to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and great respect was paid to them all; nor was there anyone needy among them, for all who owned property or houses sold them and lay them at the feet of the apostles to be distributed to everyone according to his need. [Acts 4:32-35; see also 2:42-47]

coda
22nd April 2008, 22:28
They may not be as radical as we are here,--- but perhaps there are possibilities, and they are clearly ahead of the rest of the world in atleast the recognition that the poor & inequalities do exist and something needs to be done.

Latin America's leftward tilt

But the former Roman Catholic bishop has said that Marxist-influenced liberation theology inspired his advocacy for the poor, and his victory clearly pushes Paraguay toward the left from the Colorado Party, which has ruled through dictatorship and democracy since 1947, including 35 years under brutal anti-communist Gen. Alfredo Stroessner.

Latin America's leftward tilt began with the arrival of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez a decade ago, then continued with new presidents in Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Bolivia, Ecuador, Guatemala and Nicaragua.

the only right-leaning governments in Latin America will be Colombia, El Salvador and Mexico — and arguably Peru, where a left-leaning populist party has gradually edged to the right.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24244610/

BIG BROTHER
22nd April 2008, 22:54
Well I personally don't expect much from the Bishop, but I'm glad that the monopoly that the colorado party is at last broken.

Dominicana_1965
22nd April 2008, 23:29
While I may not know much of his past, the present has demonstrated that he considers the reformist Venezuelan state a bit too radical. I won't be surprised if this pawn of the capitalist class ends up being another Lula, of the "center" (as he so well points out), which generally means that the working-class will continue to be repressed by the capitalist state.



The future Paraguayan President remarked, “I am not of the left, nor of the right. I’m in the middle as a candidate sought by my people.”

The Paraguayan moreover criticized Chávez’s decision not to renew the broadcast license of Radio Caracas Television, a station which served as a hotbed of the Venezuelan opposition. In an interview, Lugo remarked that in Venezuela, there were “elements conspiring to attack the strengthening of public freedoms.” Under Chávez, Lugo added, Venezuela had pursued a political model which was “dangerous for a real democracy,” and “totally at the service of one person.”

http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/3372

Keyser
23rd April 2008, 02:05
While I may not know much of his past, the present has demonstrated that he considers the reformist Venezuelan state a bit too radical. I won't be surprised if this pawn of the capitalist class ends up being another Lula, of the "center" (as he so well points out), which generally means that the working-class will continue to be repressed by the capitalist state.

I totally agree there.

There was much hype around the election of Lula in Brazil five years back, we all know how that turned out.

I see the same situation being played out here.

Cheung Mo
23rd April 2008, 02:16
Using the word left in reference to Lula, Bachelet, and Ortega doesn't make very much sense. Incidentally, it's fucking hilarious how ignorant (?) people are of the RCTV "ban": The network was actually pulled from Venezuelan air waves because it actively conspired to overthrow a a leftist-social democrat coalition brought to power by the Venezuelan people and because it committed an obscene amount of regulatory violations (many of which predate Chavez's election in 1998), thus causing the government to refuse a license renewal. The same shit happens in Canada because of CRTC regulations. :-P

BIG BROTHER
23rd April 2008, 03:38
Using the word left in reference to Lula, Bachelet, and Ortega doesn't make very much sense. Incidentally, it's fucking hilarious how ignorant (?) people are of the RCTV "ban": The network was actually pulled from Venezuelan air waves because it actively conspired to overthrow a a leftist-social democrat coalition brought to power by the Venezuelan people and because it committed an obscene amount of regulatory violations (many of which predate Chavez's election in 1998), thus causing the government to refuse a license renewal. The same shit happens in Canada because of CRTC regulations. :-P

I know, why do the people worry so much about that network? I bet if a leftist network organized a failed revolution, it would also be cancelled.

cyu
23rd April 2008, 21:23
I won't be surprised if this pawn of the capitalist class ends up being another Lula, of the "center" (as he so well points out), which generally means that the working-class will continue to be repressed by the capitalist state.



That's a good summary of almost all politicians, which is why it's more important to push for specific policies or structural reform, than it is to support particular individuals. Some individuals may make your goals easier to achieve than others, but it's important to remember it's not the individual that's important, it's the goals you're working toward.