Ollanta Humala and South America’s Tilt to the Left
By Maxwell A. Cameron
From Puerto Rico
The appearance of a new figure in Peruvian politics, Ollanta Humala, has led to speculation that this Andean nation might be poised to join South America’s tilt to the left. When social scientists gathered for the International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association in San Juan, Puerto Rico, last week, a major debate broke out over the implications of Humala’s candidacy. Will he win? If so, will he take Peru in the same direction as Venezuela and Bolivia?
A self-styled nationalist who first achieved prominence in an unsuccessful military rebellion against the government of Alberto Fujimori, Humala is currently in first place in the presidential race, with about 32 percent of the decided vote. He is likely to make it into a runoff election, which is required in Peru if no candidate wins 50 percent plus one vote on April 9. According to the latest poll, Humala has a 50 percent chance of winning in a runoff against Lourdes Flores Nano, the conservative candidate of the National Unity alliance.
The real story in this election is not the shift to the left by the voters, but their rejection of a dysfunctional political system. The campaign has become a contest over who can best capture the mood of repudiation of the status quo. In this context, the collapse of the once-formidable Peruvian left has created a vacuum that has made the rise of Humala possible. What he represents is anyone’s guess.
Humala is an amateur with neither a coherent party organization nor experience in government. After a rapid ascent in the polls between October 2005 and January 2006, his campaign stalled in late January as a result of scandals and factionalism. His reputation was tarnished by credible accusations that in 1992 he was “Captain Carlos.” Carlos was a commander in the Alto Huallaga region who committed human rights abuses in the war with the Shining Path, a fanatical revolutionary group whose “prolonged people’s war” caused close to 70,000 deaths between 1980 and 2000. Yet the criminal allegations have not derailed Humala’s candidacy.
Why have the accusations of human rights abuses done so little damage to Humala’s campaign? First, many voters do not trust the media; they believe witnesses can be bought, and that the charges are part of a political campaign. Second, many people believe human rights abuses were unavoidable and necessary in the fight with the Shining Path, and Humala casts himself as a patriotic soldier who dutifully followed orders. Finally, the Peruvian left—once a major political force—has splintered into three or four mini-parties. If the polls are right, not a single left-wing party will passes the 4 percent threshold necessary to win seats in congress. The vacuum on the left helps explain the sudden upsurge of Humala.
Humala claims inspiration from General Juan Velasco Alvarado, the populist and nationalist general who implemented land reform and worker-run cooperatives as part of an effort to establish a corporatist-authoritarian political system in the 1970s. Unlike Velasco, however, Humala is unlikely to alter basic property rights. His most radical policy proposals include renegotiating contracts with foreign enterprises and refusing to sign a recently negotiated Free Trade Agreement with the United States. This is tepid stuff compared to the radicalism of the 1970s and 1980s, but Humala is unlikely to be able to pursue a more radical agenda. Peru has neither the indigenous social movements that brought Evo Morales to power in Bolivia’s December 2005 election, nor the disciplined and coherent party organizations that have sustained the left in Chile, Uruguay, and Brazil.
Peru does have the conditions that make for anti-system politics everywhere: miserable poverty, gross inequality, and a growing sense of injustice and hopelessness. The fact that Humala has captured the loyalty of one third of the electorate proves that the status quo is not working for many Peruvians. Wealth created by years of robust export-led growth has not trickled down to the shantytowns, highland villages, or rural areas. The poor feel more abandoned today than under Fujimori. They will tilt toward any candidate who incarnates their frustration. Their vote is not for a particular ideology, but against a system that is cynically indifferent to their suffering—except at election time.
See also:
Peru May Join Latin America’s Populist Tilt to Left
David Luhnow
The Wall Street Journal, 18 January 2006
The Daily Journal
Caracas
Accessed: March 25,2006
Latin Leftists are redefining politics in a region once known for armed struggle
MEXICO CITY (AP) – These aren’t the hide-in-the-hills leftists of yesteryear, ready to take up arms against the oppressor.
A new wave of Latin American leaders – variously labeled leftist, populist, nationalist or socialist – is redefining politics in a region where U.S.-backed, right-wing dictatorships spent decades crushing their mostly leftist opponents and supporting corporate interests amid fears of inroads by the Soviet Union and its Cuban proxy.
That struggle, fought everywhere from the mountains of Guatemala to the streets of Argentina, has given way to a new generation of politicians as the Cold War recedes into history – a more pragmatic left that embraces its own flavor of free-market policies while vowing to champion the poor and forgotten.
The wave has carried leftist leaders to power in South America’s largest and richest nations, as well as impoverished Bolivia. And while once-dominant conservatives haven’t vanished altogether – right-leaning candidates are popular in Peru and Colombia – the trend is likely to intensify with elections still to come this year in Peru, Colombia, Mexico, Brazil, Nicaragua and Venezuela.
Once-reliable allies can no longer be counted on to support the U.S. in international disputes, and have refused to sign trade deals that preserve subsidies for U.S. industries.
Standing up to perceived U.S. bullying is a reliable way to win votes, and the White House has delivered a tailor-made issue by threatening to cut aid to Latin American countries that refuse to make U.S. citizens immune to prosecution in the new International Criminal Court.
The election with the biggest impact on U.S. policy may be in Mexico, where the front-runner, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, could end a 24-year run of conservative leadership that has moved the southern neighbor steadily to the right. Like all Mexican politicians, he has reacted angrily to the U.S. crackdown on illegal immigration.
And while López Obrador has good relations with most of Mexico’s business community, he worries some American business interests.
A former leader of rowdy labor protests whose left-center party absorbed Mexico’s old communists, López Obrador was noted as Mexico City’s mayor for handouts to the poor and big-ticket public works projects, an approach to governing that earned him the label many politicians dread: populist.
The term has come to mean short-term pandering to the masses at the expense of the long-term good for all. Similar policies left many Latin American nations deeply in debt and doomed to boom-and-bust economic cycles.
Then there’s socialist, a vague term if there ever was one in Latin America, where only Cuban communist Fidel Castro advocates full-on socialist-style public ownership of the means of production. The socialist label is also proudly shared by Chilean free-trader Michelle Bachelet, Venezuelan firebrand Hugo Chávez and Bolivian coca farmer-turned-President Evo Morales.
But under Chávez’ brand of “Bolivarian Socialism,” the state has tried to maintain a vibrant private sector while claiming an ever-larger role in managing the economy. Morales’ “Movement Toward Socialism” party is trying to impose the same changes on Bolivia.
And while Peru’s outsider presidential candidate Ollanta Humala says he’s a “nationalist” not a “socialist,” he too would impose greater state control over a free market he considers a “utopia.”
Some Latin leftists – like Chávez and Humala, rose through military ranks. Others came up through Marxist-influenced politics of protest. But aside from Castro, all now seem unified in the belief that private business remains essential to economic growth that can in turn ease the region’s widespread poverty. And that has made for some intriguing twists on the old political labels.
López Obrador has maintained such cozy relations with Latin America’s richest businessman, Carlos Slim, that the Zapatista rebels attack him for not being leftist enough.
Argentina’s Néstor Kirchner and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, a former radical union leader who has embraced conservative economic policies as Brazil’s first leftist president, face similar complaints.
Both Silva and Kirchner orchestrated early payoffs of their nations’ International Monetary Fund debts, saving billions in interest and restoring some national pride. And in Chile, the Socialist-led government just won re-election with promises to maintain a fiscal discipline unmatched by the free-spending conservatives in charge in Washington.
While most of these leaders talk about a common Latin American identity – an idea much in evidence when Morales was celebrated at his inauguration as an example for all of Latin America’s Indians – they also insist on defending their countries’ sovereignty – an attitude increasingly labeled nationalist, particularly when it means standing up to the United States.
Humala, a retired army lieutenant colonel, labels his outsider campaign a “nationalist project” for Peru, and while he says he wouldn’t seize property or limit free speech, he’s gained a strong following among voters seeking a tough leader to punish the corrupt and impose order.
Leftist, Populist, Socialist, Nationalist – these can be fighting words, especially when the U.S. defense secretary joins in the rhetorical battle.
“We’ve seen some populist leadership appealing to masses of people, and elections like Evo Morales in Bolivia take place that clearly are worrisome,” Donald H. Rumsfeld warned in a recent speech. He also compared the nationalist, socialist Chávez to the original National Socialist, Adolf Hitler.
Chávez’ quick response: “The imperialist, mass murdering, fascist attitude of the president of the United States doesn’t have limits. I think Hitler could be a nursery baby next to George W. Bush.”
Imperialist? Fascist? Many Latin Americans attach these terms to the United States, especially after U.S. President George Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox were rejected as bullies for pushing a Free Trade Area of the Americas deal that critics said would preserve huge subsidies for U.S. industries.
These acts of nationalist defiance – along with policies to do more for the poor and a general revulsion against of the bloodshed of past decades – have sapped public enthusiasm for the scattered groups of armed leftists that remain in Latin America.
Mexico’s Zapatistas have refused to give up their guns and masks, and other small rebel bands sometimes attack Mexican police. Peru’s once-feared Maoist Shining Path is down to a few hundred rebels protecting drug traffickers and occasionally killing police in the jungle. And the Revolutionary Armed forces of Colombia has been reduced, after half a century, to a small peasant army with scarce public support.
Right-wing assassins decimated its political wing decades ago, and Colombia’s peaceful left has withered under the tenure of right-wing President Alvaro Uribe.
All this goes to show that the old labels are increasingly misleading in Latin America – a point made recently by Carlos Fuentes, a famed Mexican novelist, moderate leftist and frequent critic of U.S. policies.
Fuentes wrote that while López Obrador has been unfairly “demonized” as a populist demagogue, Chávez is a “tropical Mussolini” trying to pass himself off as a leftist. His recommendation: Latin leftists should follow the Chilean socialist model, a real genre-bender that mixes free-market economics and fiscal restraint with poverty-reduction programs.
In most cases, that’s what they’re already doing. These new leaders have found electoral success by walking a fine line between fiscally sound policies that please international markets and creating social programs for their long-ignored populations.
“I don’t see how we can be opposed to that if it helps stabilize democratic systems,” said Riordan Roett, director of Western Hemisphere studies at Johns Hopkins University.