6:12 pm By Maegan La Mala · Guatemala|Politics · Comments Off
10 Sep 2007
While here in the U.S. we watched Democratic presidential candidates pander to Latino voters, voters in Guatemala were casting their ballots for president. 96 percent of votes have been tallied, and as per usual in Latin American elections, there will be a run-off. Businessman Alvaro Colom will face off with conservative ex-General Otto Perez in the segunda vuelta on November 4th.
The most internationally-known candidate in the 2007 Guatemalan elections, Nobel Laureate Rigoberta Menchu, didn’t fair well at the ballot box, receiving a mere 3.4% of votes.
Menchu points to a “fear of the indigenous” as the reason for her poor showings at the polls. In an exclusive interview with AP, Menchu says:
With 42 percent of the population “we indigenous people are a majority and that’s why they are afraid that if I make it, it will be dangerous. They use a fake fear like with Evo Morales, that Evo Morales is going to come and start an uprising among farm workers,” said the presidential candidate on Saturday.
According to Mexico’s El Universal, it is that same fear that had her being asked time and time again during her campaign about her relationship indigenous leaders, Hugo Chavez and Evo himself.
Via / Forbes and El Universal
Image via Edgarin’s Flickr page
9:34 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Music|TV · Comments Off
10 Sep 2007For those who chose to watch the Democrats spar bilingually instead of the MTV Video Music Awards last night, Shakira and Beyonce won a moonman for the above collaboration. The exact name of the category is Most Earth Shattering Collaboration. My earth wasn’t shattered , but what do I know.
5:55 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Media|Politics|TV · 8 Comments
10 Sep 2007
It was the first time in history that candidates in a presidential campaign addressed Latino voters on Spanish language television. The drum beat of buzz around this event began several weeks ago, and anticipation has been building up in Latino media about the “historic event”. Historic it may have been, but groundbreaking it was not. After watching the YouTube debate and the PBS forum, the Univisión event seems like más de lo mismo — more of the same. The only real difference was the terrible simultaneous translation and how hard it was to differentiate the candidates’ stances on issues, as they all seemed to be either parroting their closest neighbor in the responses, or punting questions to avoid straight answers. I guess it’s only fair that the Latino community get the same treatment as the rest of the U.S. — dancing around issues and excuses made for prior fouls.
Speaking of fouls, the boulder hurled at Clinton and Obama as to why they voted for the border wall left both candidates repeating their same old lines: “border security is necessary for immigration reform”…”Immigration reform benefits immigrants because it provides a path to citizenship.”
Still it’s hard for Latinos whose families — or even they themselves — have crossed “illegally” via the Mexican-American border to understand why increased migra presence is the right thing for them. When abuses are committed by border authorities and La Migra are such a part of the Mexican immigrant experience, saying that a wall needs to be built and there needs to be increased patrolling isn’t going to be a popular proposition, even among Latinos who believe immigration reform is necessary. Most, like myself, believe that immigration reform is, in fact, possible without building a medieval wall between two countries and without making the border a more conflictive place than it already is.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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