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All elected officials in Mexico are given immunity from prosecution while in office, a privilege known as the ''fuero'', literally, ''outsideness''. However, the privilege can be revoked at any time by vote in Congress. This is known as the ''desafuero'', and in addition to removing actual immunity, it also revokes the right to run for or hold political office. All elected officials in Mexico are given immunity from prosecution while in office, a privilege known as the ''fuero'', literally, ''outsideness''. However, the privilege can be revoked at any time by vote in Congress. This is known as the ''desafuero'', and in addition to removing actual immunity, it also revokes the right to run for or hold political office.


López Obrador runs exactly this risk. In 2003, during the construction of an access road to a Mexico City hospital, López Obrador's government disregarded a federal judicial order barring expopriation of land to build the road. This is not an uncommon occurrence; almost all government construction projects in Mexico experience such problems, and they are usually settled by negotiation of the exact area of land expropriated and the size of the compensation. López Obrador runs exactly this risk. In ], during the construction of an access road to a Mexico City hospital, López Obrador's government disregarded a federal judicial order barring expopriation of land to build the road. This is not an uncommon occurrence; almost all government construction projects in Mexico experience such problems, and they are usually settled by negotiation of the exact area of land expropriated and the size of the compensation.


However, in what many see as a political move, Mexico's attorney general, appointed by president Fox of the ruling PAN party, has asked congress to remove López Obrador's immunity, so that he can be prosecuted for disregarding a judicial order, in the process making it illegal for the most popular presumed candidate to run in the presidential elections in 2006. However, in what many see as a political move, Mexico's attorney general, appointed by president Fox of the ruling PAN party, has asked congress to remove López Obrador's immunity, so that he can be prosecuted for disregarding a judicial order, in the process making it illegal for the most popular presumed candidate to run in the presidential elections in 2006.


Early 2005 saw an upsurge of popular support for AMLO, and opposition to the desafuero; in March 2005, posters declaring "No al desafuero" or similar slogans were commonly seen in Mexico City, and several grassroots movements were considering their options for demonstrating their support for López Obrador.
Although he has vigorously defended himself, the process has gone on, and Congress is expected to vote on the desafuero sometime around April 2005.


A civil association, "No nos vamos a dejar", headed by ], his Secretary, and joined by several PRD and government members, has made an aggressive funding and media campaign, spending five million pesos (around 440,000 US dollars) in March, 2005, with more to follow.
Early 2005 saw an upsurge of popular support for AMLO, and opposition to the desafuero; in March 2005, posters declaring "No al desafuero" or similar slogans were nearly universally seen in Mexico City, and several grassroots movements were considering their options for demonstrating their support for López Obrador.


Although he has vigorously defended himself, the process has gone on and López Obrador lost the first battle in a restricted vote in Congress on ], ], opening the door for the full Congress to vote some weeks later to remove his immunity.


==Publications== ==Publications==

Revision as of 07:46, 2 April 2005

Andrés Manuel López Obrador

Andrés Manuel López Obrador (b. 1953) has been the Head of Government ("Jefe de Gobierno", with a status somewhere between a city mayor and a state governor) of Mexico's Federal District (Mexico City) since the year 2000. López Obrador was previously the president of the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) in his home state of Tabasco and the president of the Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD) at the state and national levels. He is considered likely to run for president of Mexico in the 2006 elections.

In the media, López Obrador is frequently referred to by his initials AMLO and as el Peje an abbreviation of pejelagarto, a species of fish from the Lepisosteidae family, found in Tabasco.

Background

Born in the small town of Tepetitán, Macuspana municipality, in Tabasco state, López Obrador became interested in politics at an early age. He studied political science and public administration at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) before officially joining the PRI and collaborating actively in Carlos Pellicer's campaign for the governorship of Tabasco.

In 1977 he was selected to head the Instituto Indigenista (Indigenous People's Institute) of his state, where he promoted the publication of Native American literature. In 1984 he relocated to Mexico City to work at the Instituto Nacional del Consumidor (National Institute for the Consumer), a government agency.

Although he worked for a time for Tabasco governor Enrique González Pedrero, Obrador resigned over political differences to join the new dissenting wing of the PRI led by Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, which would later be transformed into an independent party, the PRD. He ran for office in Tabasco in 1988 under this new banner.

After losing that election, López Obrador served as PRD president in Tabasco until 1994, when, after losing a bid for the Tabasco state house (to the PRI, in a highly disputed election) he launched a run for the head office of his party. Obrador led the PRD from the 2 August 1996 until 10 April 1999.

Jefe de Gobierno of Mexico City

On 29 March 2000, he entered the Federal District's jefe de gobierno race. His candidacy was contested by political opponents who claimed he was not really a resident of the capital city, but the allegations did not hold, and López Obrador proved popular amongst the working classes of the city, many of which are migrants from other parts of Mexico. This, combined with support from social democrats in the middle classes, vitalized by what they saw as the first real left of center candidate in Mexican politics for a long time, assured his solid victory in the elections in the summer of 2000, with 38.3% of the popular vote. He defeated Santiago Creel of the PAN (33.4%), Jesús Silva Herzog of the PRI (22.8%), and a couple of other minor-party candidates.

Public image

During his carreer as jefe de gobierno, López Obrador has become one of the most recognizable and popular politicians in Mexico, although he has been criticized for his populism. His past as a distinguished member of the PRI for many years, and his more recent acts against the government after he joined the PRD, for instance in pressuring Pemex, the national oil monopoly, to pay farmers who claimed their land was contaminated, have made him unpopular or controversial in many political circles. Like most left-populist politicans in Latin America, López Obrador appeals to the large lower and lower middle classes, which make up the overwhelming majority of the population, but have considerably less influence in traditional politics and the media.

His public image is also one of frugality and moderation. He owns an old car, which he drives himself to work every day, refuses bodyguards, and insists on maintaining a running dialogue with the media, holding daily morning press conferences about the agenda of the district's government, and current events in the city. Opponents have claimed the press conferences are simply an excuse to get more publicity and media attention, and compared them to Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez's weekly TV broadcasts.

He is generally well liked by the citizens of Mexico City, and was voted the second-best mayor in the world by Mexicans at the ATA online poll in www.citymayors.com. Therefore, he is widely seen as the PRD's de facto candidate for the 2006 presidential elections, although he has publicly denied having made up his mind as yet regarding a presidential bid. Should he run, he's considered one of the favourites, partly because both the two other main Mexican parties having had problems coming up with a viable and popular presidential candidate so far.

Some of López Obrador's supporters for the presidency consider him to be Mexico's equivalent to the other new left-populist presidents in Latin America, such as Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (Brazil), Néstor Kirchner (Argentina), and Tabaré Vázquez (Uruguay).

Political agenda

His leadership of the city government has been one focused on social issues. Under the slogan First, the poor, he has instituted various social programs to help those living in abject poverty, including various subsidies for senior citizens.

He has also reformed the city's police force, leading to a reduction in the previously rampant corruption. Possibly as a result, the city's crime rates are on the decline. Another highly visible project has been the restoration and modernization of Mexico City's old city center, the Centro Historico, which has 16th-17th century buildings and a large number of tourist attractions, yet has been badly maintained, overcrowded, and crime-ridden in the last few decades. The Mexico City government entered into a joint venture with Carlos Slim, Latin America's richest man, and a native of the Centro Historico, to restore and rebuild large parts of the area, creating attractive new shopping and residential areas.

In an effort to improve the city's traffic conditions, a widely cited problem, his government embarked in 2003 on a number of large construction projects, aiming to increase the capacity and speed of the city's main throughfares, by constructing rapid-transit upper levels and extensions. Despite being controversial while in construction, the projects have led to a noticable improvement in travel times in the city, and more projects along the same lines are underway, or in planning.

Controversy and criticism

In 2004, AMLO's city government was rocked by two corruption scandals. In the first, Gustavo Ponce, Lopez Obrador’s finance chief, was filmed gambling at the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas. He had made 37 similar trips in the last year, his hotel bills revealing huge tips and mini-bar room charges. A probe by the Attorney General of Mexico City revealed that more than 3 million dollars in city funds may have gone missing. López Obrador reacted swiftly, placing Ponce on administrative leave from his post pending the outcome of the investigation. Ponce disappeared, and is being sought by the Interpol.

The second scandal came when Rene Bejarano, previously López Obrador's personal secretary, later elected to the Mexico City legislature, was videotaped accepting 320,000 dollars in cash. Bejarano claimed that the money, which was given to him by Carlos Ahumada, a newspaper owner and city contractor, was a cash contribution for the political campaign of Leticia Robles, a city borough leader. Robles denied involvement in any illegal campaign financing. In this case, too, López Obrador quickly distanced himself from the scandal, and suggested that while Bejarano was clearly corrupt, Carlos Ahumada, who fled to Cuba to avoid prosecution, was in cahoots with AMLO's political opponents, and that this was the reason for the convenient videotaping of the events.

As a result of being able to prove convincingly that he was not personally involved in the scandals, and his willingness to deal with the offenders instead of shielding them, López Obrador emerged from the scandals with his public image relatively unscathed.

In July 2004, after a spat of kidnappings of celebrities throughout Mexico (although few of them actually in the city), many non-governmental organizations called for a march in the city to protest the perceived high levels of crime. López Obrador criticized the march for being politicized, and referred to the reduced crime statistics in the city during his rule. Estimates place attendance at the march at between 200,000 and one million people.

Both before and after the march, the city government distributed a series of comics, called Tales of the City to combat perceived media attacks on the government and López Obrador. The issue released after the July march hinted to the march being organized and attended mostly by upper-class citizens, and drew criticism from the march's organizers. The comic has also been criticised because it openly promoted López Obrador's presidential ambitions, and cost more than $6 million pesos (around 550,000 US Dollars) from government funds.

Desafuero process of 2004-2005

All elected officials in Mexico are given immunity from prosecution while in office, a privilege known as the fuero, literally, outsideness. However, the privilege can be revoked at any time by vote in Congress. This is known as the desafuero, and in addition to removing actual immunity, it also revokes the right to run for or hold political office.

López Obrador runs exactly this risk. In 2003, during the construction of an access road to a Mexico City hospital, López Obrador's government disregarded a federal judicial order barring expopriation of land to build the road. This is not an uncommon occurrence; almost all government construction projects in Mexico experience such problems, and they are usually settled by negotiation of the exact area of land expropriated and the size of the compensation.

However, in what many see as a political move, Mexico's attorney general, appointed by president Fox of the ruling PAN party, has asked congress to remove López Obrador's immunity, so that he can be prosecuted for disregarding a judicial order, in the process making it illegal for the most popular presumed candidate to run in the presidential elections in 2006.

Early 2005 saw an upsurge of popular support for AMLO, and opposition to the desafuero; in March 2005, posters declaring "No al desafuero" or similar slogans were commonly seen in Mexico City, and several grassroots movements were considering their options for demonstrating their support for López Obrador.

A civil association, "No nos vamos a dejar", headed by Alejandro Encinas, his Secretary, and joined by several PRD and government members, has made an aggressive funding and media campaign, spending five million pesos (around 440,000 US dollars) in March, 2005, with more to follow.

Although he has vigorously defended himself, the process has gone on and López Obrador lost the first battle in a restricted vote in Congress on April, 1, 2005, opening the door for the full Congress to vote some weeks later to remove his immunity.

Publications

  • Los Primeros Pasos (First Steps)
  • Del Esplendor a la Sombra (From Splendor to Darkness)
  • Tabasco, Víctima de un Fraude (Tabasco, Victim of Fraud)
  • Entre la Historia y la Esperanza (Between History and Hope)

External Links

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