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It May Only Take 3.5% of the Population to Topple a Dictator - With Civil Resistance |
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Thursday, 02 February 2017 10:08 |
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Chenoweth writes: "Many people across the United States are despondent about the new president - and the threat to democracy his rise could represent. But they shouldn't be. At no time in recorded history have people been more equipped to effectively resist injustice using civil resistance."
Anti-Trump protesters. (photo: Getty)

It May Only Take 3.5% of the Population to Topple a Dictator - With Civil Resistance
By Erica Chenoweth, Guardian UK
02 February 17
The United States has a rich history with effective uses of nonviolent resistance. It’s time to become familiar with it
any people across the United States are despondent about the new president – and the threat to democracy his rise could represent. But they shouldn’t be. At no time in recorded history have people been more equipped to effectively resist injustice using civil resistance.
Today, those seeking knowledge about the theory and practice of civil resistance can find a wealth of information at their fingertips. In virtually any language, one can find training manuals, strategy-building tools, facilitation guides and documentation about successes and mistakes of past nonviolent campaigns.
Material is available in many formats, including graphic novels, e-classes, films and documentaries, scholarly books, novels, websites, research monographs, research inventories, and children’s books. And of course, the world is full of experienced activists with wisdom to share.
The United States has its own rich history – past and present – of effective uses of nonviolent resistance. The technique established alternative institutions like economic cooperatives, alternative courts and an underground constitutional convention in the American colonies resulting in the declaration of independence. In 20th century, strategic nonviolent resistance has won voting rights for women and for African Americans living in the Jim Crow south.
Nonviolent resistance has empowered the labor movement, closed down or cancelled dozens of nuclear plants, protected farm workers from abuse in California, motivated the recognition of Aids patients as worthy of access to life-saving treatment, protected free speech, put climate reform on the agenda, given reprieve to Dreamers, raised awareness about economic inequality, changed the conversation about systemic racism and black lives and stalled construction of an oil pipeline on indigenous lands in Standing Rock.
In fact, it is hard to identify a progressive cause in the United States that has advanced without a civil resistance movement behind it.
This does not mean nonviolent resistance always works. Of course it does not, and short-term setbacks are common too. But long-term change never comes with submission, resignation, or despair about the inevitability and intractability of the status quo.
And among the different types of dissent available (armed insurrection or combining armed and unarmed action), nonviolent resistance has historically been the most effective. Compared with armed struggle, whose romanticized allure obscures its staggering costs, nonviolent resistance has actually been the quickest, least costly, and safest way to struggle. Moreover, civil resistance is recognized as a fundamental human right under international law.
Nonviolent resistance does not happen overnight or automatically. It requires an informed and prepared public, keen to the strategy and dynamics of its political power. Although nonviolent campaigns often begin with a committed and experienced core, successful ones enlarge the diversity of participants, maintain nonviolent discipline and expand the types of nonviolent actions they use.
They constantly increase their base of supporters, build coalitions, leverage social networks, and generate connections with those in the opponent’s network who may be ambivalent about cooperating with oppressive policies.
Crucially, nonviolent resistance works not by melting the heart of the opponent but by constraining their options. A leader and his inner circle cannot pass and implement policies alone. They require cooperation and obedience from many people to carry out plans and policies.
In the US on Tuesday, dozens of lawmakers have said they will boycott confirmation votes for Trump nominees. Numerous police departments countrywide have announced that they will not comply with unethical federal policies (particularly regarding deportations). And the federal government employs more than 3 million civil servants – people on whose continued support the US government relies to implement its policies. Many such civil servants have already begun important conversations about how to dissent from within the administration. They, too, provide an important check on power.
The Women’s March on Washington and its affiliated marches – which may have been the largest single-day demonstration in US history – show a population eager and willing to show up to defend their rights.
Of course, nonviolent resistance often evokes brutality by the government, especially as campaigns escalate their demands and use more disruptive techniques. But historical data shows that when campaigns are able to prepare, train, and remain resilient, they often succeed regardless of whether the government uses violence against them.
Historical studies suggest that it takes 3.5% of a population engaged in sustained nonviolent resistance to topple brutal dictatorships. If that can be true in Chile under Gen Pinochet and Serbia under Milosevic, a few million Americans could prevent their elected government from adopting inhumane, unfair, destructive or oppressive policies – should such drastic measures ever be needed.

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Neil Gorsuch Is Reputed to Be to the Right of Antonin Scalia, Which Is Mind-Boggling |
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Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>
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Wednesday, 01 February 2017 15:23 |
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Pierce writes: "It is a dark moment in your life when you realize that a Supreme Court nominee will be causing damage long after you're dead."
Donald Trump's nominee for the Supreme Court Neil Gorsuch. (photo: Alex Wong/Getty)

Neil Gorsuch Is Reputed to Be to the Right of Antonin Scalia, Which Is Mind-Boggling
By Charles Pierce, Esquire
01 February 17
And other fun facts to start your Wednesday.
ust after sunset, if you took a little jaunt down Pennsylvania Avenue from the Capitol to the White House, you would have seen it all dolled up like a Hollywood premiere. The only thing that was missing was a red carpet ("Tell us, Senator Graham. Who are you wearing?") and Entertainment Tonight, although the latter is probably on Melania Trump's No Way in Hell list in perpetuity. He gave them a show and the television news divisions, network and cable, demonstrated that they learned nothing from getting played for two years by President* Trump and his extended carny act.
And what emerged from the ballyhoo was prospective Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch, who is 49-years-old and who, if he's confirmed, and assuming the actuarial tables hold, will be bivouac'ing on the bench for three decades. It is a dark moment in your life when you realize that a Supreme Court nominee will be causing damage long after you're dead.
I am Mr. Happy Fun Guy today.
To its credit, the Democratic side of the Senate seems to be spoiling for a fight. Reaction to Gorsuch's nomination was swift and uncomplimentary. Minority Leader Chuck Schumer issued a statement that placed opposition to Gorsuch into the context of last weekend's madness.
"The Senate must insist upon 60 votes for any Supreme Court nominee, a bar that was met by each of President Obama's nominees. The burden is on Judge Neil Gorsuch to prove himself to be within the legal mainstream and, in this new era, willing to vigorously defend the Constitution from abuses of the Executive branch and protect the constitutionally enshrined rights of all Americans. Given his record, I have very serious doubts about Judge Gorsuch's ability to meet this standard. Judge Gorsuch has repeatedly sided with corporations over working people, demonstrated a hostility toward women's rights, and most troubling, hewed to an ideological approach to jurisprudence that makes me skeptical that he can be a strong, independent Justice on the Court."
And all hands seemed instantly on deck and at their stations. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi chimed in, even though the House won't have any input here except to heckle from the peanut gallery.
"After the relentless contempt for women that candidate Trump displayed throughout his campaign, it is no surprise that President Trump intends to place someone hostile to women's rights on the Supreme Court. In the Hobby Lobby case, Judge Neil Gorsuch revealed his eagerness to single out women's health for discrimination and enable employers to meddle in their workers' most intimate health decisions. "Judge Gorsuch's record reveals he holds radical views far outside the mainstream of American legal thought. The consequences of placing President Trump's justice on the Supreme Court could not be more serious or far-reaching. House Democrats stand with the American people in demanding the toughest scrutiny of Judge Gorsuch before the Republican Senate holds any vote to send him to the highest court in the land."
To be sure, Gorsuch has been nurtured literally from birth in the terrariums of what used to be called the New Right. This was a point that Senator Professor Warren made in her statement regarding his nomination.
"President Trump had the chance to select a consensus nominee to the Supreme Court. To the surprise of absolutely nobody, he failed that test. Instead, he carried out his public promise to select a nominee from a list drawn up by far right activist groups that were financed by big business interests. Judge Gorsuch has been on this list for four months. His public record, which I have reviewed in detail, paints a clear picture. Before even joining the bench, he advocated to make it easier for public companies to defraud investors. As a judge, he has twisted himself into a pretzel to make sure the rules favor giant companies over workers and individual Americans. He has sided with employers who deny wages, improperly fire workers, or retaliate against whistleblowers for misconduct. He has ruled against workers in all manner of discrimination cases. And he has demonstrated hostility toward women's access to basic health care. For years, powerful interests have executed a full-scale assault on the integrity of our federal judiciary, trying to turn the Supreme Court into one more rigged game that works only for the rich and the powerful. They spent millions to keep this seat open, and Judge Gorsuch is their reward."
His mother was the late Anne Gorsuch, whom President Ronald Reagan tasked with running the EPA into the ground. Gorsuch was such a good soldier at her mission that she wound up being cited for contempt of Congress. Young Neil came up through Columbia and Harvard Law, as one does. He clerked for both Byron White and Anthony Kennedy on the Supreme Court and for longtime rightwing federal appeals Judge David Sentelle, who overturned the Iran-Contra sentences of Oliver North and John Poindexter. He was also central to replacing Robert Fiske, the original Whitewater special prosecutor, with the egregious Kenneth Starr, whereupon the Great Penis Chase of the 1990s was off to the races. Gorsuch clerked for Sentelle from 1991 to 1992, when Sentelle was just getting warmed up.
He is reputed to be to the right of the man he has been picked to replace, Antonin Scalia, which is mind-boggling. (How can you be to the right of Scalia without wearing bearskins to work?) He is death on reproductive rights, awful on the issue of police brutality, and a good friend to corporations. He is the very model of a modern Gilded Age jurist. He said this in a speech last year:
"The great project of Justice Scalia's career was to remind us of the differences between judges and legislators. To remind us that legislators may appeal to their own moral convictions and to claims about social utility to reshape the law as they think it should be in the future. But that judges should do none of these things in a democratic society."
(Gorsuch also enlivened one opinion by diagramming a sentence in it, an absurd exercise that was the bane of my parochial school existence. All of my diagrams looked like plans for the Erie Lackawanna railroad. I'd filibuster this guy just because he's able to do it.)
In other words, he's pretty much what any Republican nominee in 2017 would look like. Except, as we know, these are not ordinary times. "Was it a surprise?" the president* burbled, like the winner of a bass-fishing tournament holding up the winning entry. "It was a surprise, right?"
And, of course, hanging over everything was poor Merrick Garland, the man whom Barack Obama nominated to replace Scalia and to whom, in an unprecedented offense to a sitting president, a Republican Senate would not even grant a committee hearing. Even Tuesday night, after all the dark magic paid off, Senator Lindsey Graham was still running the rap that the problem with Garland's nomination was that President Obama insisted on being president for the full eight years of his two terms.
"It came when the primary season already had begun. Everybody thought Clinton was going to win. I thought she was going to win. I didn't think Trump would win. I didn't vote for Trump, but he's the president now and he deserves to have his choice."
This is all bollocks, just as it was last winter when President Obama chose Garland. The Republican senatorial majority hijacked a Supreme Court nomination and stood fast against the outrage that followed and now they have everything they wanted. Clearly, the president* outsourced this choice to the Federalist Society and the Heritage Foundation, as he promised he would, since this was just one too many damn things about which he knows nothing that he might have to care about.
Clearly, the theocratic right got the payoff it expected when it swallowed its integrity whole and got behind the most obvious heathen ever to run for the presidency. And the rest of us get Neil Gorsuch, pure child of the Reagan Revolution, who likely will sit on the Supreme Court until 2040. By then, god willing, and if baby Jeebus is still my amigo, we all will have come to our senses. Or our grandchildren will have done so for us, as they wonder what we could possibly have been thinking in 2016.

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Reuters Orders Reporters to Cover Trump Like an Authoritarian Regime: Expect 'Physical Threats' |
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Wednesday, 01 February 2017 15:20 |
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Excerpt: "The first 12 days of the Trump presidency (yes, that's all it's been!) have been memorable for all - and especially challenging for us in the news business."
President Trump. (photo: Brendan McDermid/Reuters)

Reuters Orders Reporters to Cover Trump Like an Authoritarian Regime: Expect 'Physical Threats'
By Reuters
01 February 17
n a message to staff today, Reuters Editor-in-Chief Steve Adler wrote about covering President Trump the Reuters way:
The first 12 days of the Trump presidency (yes, that’s all it’s been!) have been memorable for all – and especially challenging for us in the news business. It’s not every day that a U.S. president calls journalists “among the most dishonest human beings on earth” or that his chief strategist dubs the media “the opposition party.” It’s hardly surprising that the air is thick with questions and theories about how to cover the new Administration.
So what is the Reuters answer? To oppose the administration? To appease it? To boycott its briefings? To use our platform to rally support for the media? All these ideas are out there, and they may be right for some news operations, but they don’t make sense for Reuters. We already know what to do because we do it every day, and we do it all over the world.
To state the obvious, Reuters is a global news organization that reports independently and fairly in more than 100 countries, including many in which the media is unwelcome and frequently under attack. I am perpetually proud of our work in places such as Turkey, the Philippines, Egypt, Iraq, Yemen, Thailand, China, Zimbabwe, and Russia, nations in which we sometimes encounter some combination of censorship, legal prosecution, visa denials, and even physical threats to our journalists. We respond to all of these by doing our best to protect our journalists, by recommitting ourselves to reporting fairly and honestly, by doggedly gathering hard-to-get information – and by remaining impartial. We write very rarely about ourselves and our troubles and very often about the issues that will make a difference in the businesses and lives of our readers and viewers.
We don’t know yet how sharp the Trump administration’s attacks will be over time or to what extent those attacks will be accompanied by legal restrictions on our news-gathering. But we do know that we must follow the same rules that govern our work anywhere, namely:
Do’s:
--Cover what matters in people’s lives and provide them the facts they need to make better decisions.
--Become ever-more resourceful: If one door to information closes, open another one.
--Give up on hand-outs and worry less about official access. They were never all that valuable anyway. Our coverage of Iran has been outstanding, and we have virtually no official access. What we have are sources.
--Get out into the country and learn more about how people live, what they think, what helps and hurts them, and how the government and its actions appear to them, not to us.
--Keep the Thomson Reuters Trust Principles close at hand, remembering that “the integrity, independence and freedom from bias of Reuters shall at all times be fully preserved.”
Don’ts:
--Never be intimidated, but:
--Don’t pick unnecessary fights or make the story about us. We may care about the inside baseball but the public generally doesn’t and might not be on our side even if it did.
--Don’t vent publicly about what might be understandable day-to-day frustration. In countless other countries, we keep our own counsel so we can do our reporting without being suspected of personal animus. We need to do that in the U.S., too.
--Don’t take too dark a view of the reporting environment: It’s an opportunity for us to practice the skills we’ve learned in much tougher places around the world and to lead by example – and therefore to provide the freshest, most useful, and most illuminating information and insight of any news organization anywhere.
This is our mission, in the U.S. and everywhere. We make a difference in the world because we practice professional journalism that is both intrepid and unbiased. When we make mistakes, which we do, we correct them quickly and fully. When we don’t know something, we say so. When we hear rumors, we track them down and report them only when we are confident that they are factual. We value speed but not haste: When something needs more checking, we take the time to check it. We try to avoid “permanent exclusives” – first but wrong. We operate with calm integrity not just because it’s in our rulebook but because – over 165 years – it has enabled us to do the best work and the most good.

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The Zapatista Candidate |
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Wednesday, 01 February 2017 15:11 |
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Niembro writes: "By participating in Mexico's 2018 election, the EZLN can bring its indigenous anticapitalist platform into mainstream politics."
A row of Zapatista women in 1996. (photo: Julian Stallabrass/Flickr)

The Zapatista Candidate
By Rasec Niembro, Jacobin
01 February 17
By participating in Mexico’s 2018 election, the EZLN can bring its indigenous anticapitalist platform into mainstream politics.
uring the 1980s and 1990s, Latin America caught up with international economic and political trends. Neoliberalism had become the only alternative, and technocrats — elected thanks to repressive strategies that destroyed left institutions and organized unions — implemented it. These conditions were enacted in a context of rising inequality, where poverty was presented, as a Mexican finance minister declared, as “just a great myth.”
By the early 1990s, backlash to these developments began to build, creating a strong opposition movement. Peasant and indigenous groups animated and sustained a challenge to Mexico’s neoliberalism.
On January 1, 1994, the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) declared war on the state. The Zapatistas emerged from the disastrous neoliberal policies that affected all of Latin America. The middle class found itself in an increasingly precarious situation, while the poor not only saw their capacity to subsist severely undermined, but were completely ignored by the government and a significant proportion of society. In his first public appearance, Zapatista leader Subcomandante Marcos affirmed: “We are not interested in public office nor have any kind of political power, we want justice for the indigenous peoples.”
Since the EZLN entered the public sphere, they have never supported a political party. Instead, they focused on antiglobalization and anti-neoliberal social movements and on winning indigenous control over local resources, especially in the Chiapas region.
Before the 2000 presidential election — in which the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) lost its first election in seventy-one years — the EZLN demurred:
The electoral time is not for the Zapatistas, especially considering the antidemocratic context, one in which the political forums are not working for the bottom, in which the words plebiscite or referendum are just lyrics hard to spell.
The EZLN’s abstentionist position gradually changed. In late 2005, the Zapatistas had developed a clear agenda based on Marxist socialism with some elements of anarchism. This new agenda, named “The Other Campaign,” called for the organization of a large national movement that would transform social relations, develop a national program, and write a new constitution. They urged social movements across Mexico to work together on an initiative to empower people from the bottom up, guided by an anticapitalist ideology and liberated from any registered political party.
Although “The Other Campaign” never called for a boycott against the 2006 election, it harshly criticized the mainstream candidates, including Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the social-democratic candidate who ran under the slogan “the poor first.”
Subcomandante Marcos stated the rebel position on that year’s electoral situation: “As Zapatistas we are not calling to vote or not to vote. As Zapatistas, we are what we do. What you can do is to invite people to be organized, to resist, to fight.”
Felipe Calderón of the conservative National Action Party (PAN) won the election by a .56-percent margin. Federal courts confirmed his victory in September 2006, and he was declared president. Andrés Manuel López Obrador, however, alleged irregularities in over 30 percent of the country’s polling stations, and after an unsuccessful judicial appeal, he continued to call for protests. He reported that the EZLN had guided socialist organizations not to vote for him, indirectly helping Calderón steal the election. Since then, the EZLN and López Obrador, the most iconic left contender in recent Mexican history, have had a tense relationship.
Before the 2012 election, the EZLN used its official magazine, Rebeldía, to dismiss mainstream politics once again. They wrote, the “electoral passion lives only in politicians, breathing far from the people.”
Between January and February 2011, Subcomandante Marcos and intellectual Luis Villoro exchanged four public letters to “try to understand Mexico.” In those documents, Marcos reflected on how capitalism was destroying social cohesion. He also said that the United States and its corporations were winning the war on drugs; meanwhile, for Mexico, “the result was a broken society, a devastated, depopulated, and irretrievably broken nation.”
In 2012, Enrique Peña Nieto was elected, and the PRI has been in power since, boosting neoliberal reforms in education, labor, and energy. In 2011, Marcos had predicted a bleaker outcome: he believed Peña Nieto would intensify the “war against organized crime with its trail of collateral damage.”
For twenty-three years, EZLN kept its promise to seek justice and fight against capitalism without taking state power. But that is about to change.
Time to Attack
On October 14, during the Fifth National Indigenous Congress (CNI) in San Cristóbal de las Casas, the EZLN announced a historic decision: they would support an independent candidate for the presidency in the 2018 elections. After this historic pronouncement Subcomandante Marcos — now called “Galeano” — ended with a short but significant battle cry: “The time has come to attack.”
Although they have not selected a candidate yet, they have announced it will be an indigenous woman, carefully chosen through a democratic process and extensive consultation with all communities. At the end of the conference, the CNI declared that it had decided to “remove the power . . . that only offers a panorama of death, violence, plunder, and destruction.”
The statement went on:
We confirm that our struggle is not for power; rather we are calling upon native peoples and civil society to organize to stop this destruction, to strengthen our resistance and rebellion in defense of the life of each person, each family, collective, community, and neighborhood. To build peace and justice working from below, from where we are what we are.
It is time for rebel dignity, to build a new nation for all people, to strengthen the power of the anticapitalist left, and to make offenders pay for the pain of the people of Mexico.
On January 1, 2017, the National Indigenous Council announced it had created the Indigenous Council of Government (CIG), which will serve as the voice for the 525 indigenous communities in Mexico. In May, the CIG will appoint an indigenous woman as spokesperson, and she will run in the 2018 elections. The platform will be presented after the candidate is announced, but it “will be based on the protection of mother nature, fair wages, universal and free health care, and public, scientific and secular education.”
Even though the Associated Press briefly mentioned the announcement, Mexican mainstream media did not cover the decision at all. Only some progressive publications provided analysis. In truth, people are still skeptical about the true scope and significance of this movement.
The pronouncement raised a firestorm of controversy. López Obrador publicly condemned the Zapatistas. He once again blamed them for his 2006 loss and excoriated them for not supporting him in 2012. Then he insinuated that their leaders were playing the same game as the government, and that the decision to support a candidate proves that the group does not have a real argument. López Obrador claimed that, in the indigenous areas with strong EZLN presence, people voted for the PRI, insisting that he is not afraid of their electoral initiative because “the people will not pay attention” to their candidate.
But López Obrador’s comments are wrong. In any political struggle unity is fundamental, but we cannot let unity be used as an instrument to censor a genuine champion of the Left. Accusing the Zapatistas and the CNI of pandering to the government because they intend to participate in the elections signals arrogance and intolerance.
As Pedro Salmerón, one of the best historians in Latin America, accurately expresses: the neoliberal right will present at least three candidates for the 2018 Presidential Election; if López Obrador — the only leftist candidate from an institutionalized coalition — doesn’t win, we cannot blame an authentic anticapitalist candidate for the outcome.
Impractical Consequences
Data from the electoral map indicates that an indigenous female candidate could have a direct impact on twenty-eight districts where native peoples are dominant. The populations in these districts represent about 1 percent of potential voters.
Nevertheless, the timing of the EZLN’s decision to bring their cause into national affairs one more time is significant. Right now, President Peña Nieto is more concerned about pleasing President Trump than about working for the millions of poor people starving in Mexico.
As Jaime Bailón Corres, one of Mexico’s top experts on indigenous rights, notes, the official language of Peña Nieto’s government — specifically from director-general of the National Commission for the Development of Indigenous Peoples — has returned to the old paternalistic discourse that focuses on combating poverty. This position ignores the constitutional reform on indigenous rights and culture, recognized in 2001, which considers Mexico as a pluricultural society, based on a historical recognition of cultural heterogeneity rather than a monocultural model of society and focuses on equality of rights.
That is why the choice of an indigenous woman to run as an independent candidate represents a turning point in Mexican politics. It would be the first time in Mexico that an armed, socialist group entered the electoral scene. That their candidate will be an indigenous woman is good news for political representation.
This experience may be only the first step in the EZLN becoming a political and electoral alternative that genuinely represents the interests of the most oppressed groups in the country. This situation would not be new in the region: the Movimiento para la Liberación Nacional in Uruguay, the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front in El Salvador, the MR8 in Brazil, and the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia in Colombia — which has been an active electoral force in some regions — have all run candidates for office.
The state’s abandonment of indigenous people has created high rates of marginalization and poverty. According to the 2010 Census, the indigenous population representing 11 percent of the nation, has worse educational indicators — higher rates of illiteracy and lower educational achievement — than any other sector. They also have significantly less access to employment opportunities. This downgrading is not only reflected in economics, but also in political representation: only twenty of the 620 lawmakers in Congress have indigenous roots.
Even if an independent, indigenous woman is unlikely to win, the effort could help construct a national, grassroots movement that can push a range of issues related to indigenous rights back onto the agenda.
In this scenario, the electoral process would take on new gradations. Campaign messages would detail the reality in which indigenous communities live and highlight indigenous and poor people’s demands. But, above all, they would reveal the deep damage that government policies — aligned with savage capitalism and rampant imperialism — have caused, policies that have destroyed indigenous communities for centuries and that most people in Mexico have ignored.
The fact that the Zapatistas have proven experience in electing and ruling at the local level is evidence of the capacities of state transformation and the possibility of gaining political control at the national level. Now that the EZLN appears to see electoral participation as a site of resistance, organization, and struggle, we have great opportunity to democratize social and state institutions. Placing the anticapitalist left in the center of national politics could have a tremendous impact on the way people and governments prioritize public policies.
Practical Opportunities
Discussion over this move should not focus on splitting votes against the neoliberal consensus government. A united movement against capitalism and imperialism should not exclude, but instead involve, many local fronts with democratic and electoral goals.
The alliances that the Zapatistas would have to enter would need to be guided at new working-class groups of the broadest kind, rather than liberal urban elites. It would offer the opportunity to present genuine radical ideas to the people. If there is anything to learn from electoral politics around the globe in recent years, it is that the ideology of moderation is in a state of collapse.
The style and culture of the radical left in Mexico has been historically shaped by intellectuals living in urban areas. They are a growing and diverse group; often they hail from modest backgrounds. But their priorities, rhetoric, and outlook is often radically different from rural and indigenous working-class people in small towns, most of them living in extreme poverty.
That must change. Unless the Mexican left is rooted in working-class communities, unless it speaks a language that resonates with working-class values or priorities, then it has no political future. A large coalition based in class is critical to build a victorious campaign.
The Zapatista movement’s electoral turn presents an opportunity to do just that. There is no other faction which can present a class-based program defending all exploited groups in the country, fighting against sexism, racism, homophobia, and at the same time oppose the neoliberal interests which have made the Mexican state into one that actively works to spread poverty throughout the country.
Ultimately, Mexican society in general, and the indigenous people in particular, will decide whether this path is useful for transforming the country. If an indigenous female candidate can unify the discontent of the lower and middle class in a coherent voice of equality, opportunities and rights for all, she will surely be a contender for the presidency.
The Zapatistas’ electoral campaign offers an opportunity to transfer political power to the streets, schools, factories, and rural areas — far from the presidential offices in downtown Mexico City.

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