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Posts Tagged ‘El Salvador Elections

El Salvador Meet Your President Elect

7:29 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · El Salvador|Politics · 1 Comment

17 Mar 2009

mauriciofunes
Ending 20 years of rule by the right wing ARENA party, Mauricio Funes of the Farabundo Marti Front for National Liberation (FMLN) won the presidential election, held this past Sunday, in El Salvador.

“Today, the citizenship that believed in hope and defeated fear has
triumphed. In the wake of an aggressive campaign, he promised to “cast aside
confrontation and the spirit of vengeance. My government will be based on the spirit of national unity,” Funes said.

The official count has Fulnes winning 51.3 percent of the vote against 48.7 percent.

The ARENA candidate, Rodrigo Avila, ran with ads linking Fulnes and his party, which were the Marxist rebels during the long, bloody Salvadorian civil war, with Hugo Chavez and Cuba, trying to inspire a new level of red fear that the voting public didn’t fall for.

Amy Goodman of Democracy Now, interviewed our amigo Roberto Lovato, the son of Salvadorian immigrants and a journalist who is in El Salvador.

“Let the joy come and wash away the suffering.” It’s something on an order I’ve never seen in my life. As a child of Salvadoran immigrants and as someone who’s spent time here and as someone who saw the Obama experience, I really can’t tell you what this is like, when you’re talking about ending not just the ARENA party’s rule, but you’re talking about 130 years of oligarchy and military dictatorship, by and large, that’s just ended last night. You’re talking about $6 billion that the United States used to defeat the FMLN, as you mentioned earlier. You’re talking about one of the most formidable — a formerly political military, now political forces, in the hemisphere, showing the utter failure of not just the ARENA party but of somebody in particular, too, who has a special place in many of our hearts: Ronald Reagan. This is the defeat of Ronald Reagan, nothing less.

Via / New York Times and Alternet

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El Salvador: Elections Come With a History

8:37 am By Blogs Media · El Salvador|Politics · Comments Off

12 Mar 2009

kidsWith the presidential elections in El Salvador just a few days away, many here in the U.S., especially those who are not Salvadorian, don’t understand or have a sense of the complicated politics in the Central American country. Most don’t even know anything about el Salvador save stories of gang murders.

A right-wing party has dominated Salvadorian politics for the last 20 or so years at the expense of “minority” populations like indigenous peoples. Roberto Lovato from Of America gives us some historical context:

To understand the current presidential elections in El Salvador, you have to understand the cities, towns and campo, El Salvador’s countryside, located outside the capital of San Salvador. What follows is my attempt to provide further context for the media’s description of the horse race between the FMLN and the ARENA parties. A good starting point is the fact that both parties trace all or some of their political roots to Izalco, a relatively small town in the western, coffee-growing part of the country. Izalco is also home to one of the largest concentrations of El Salvador’s small (less than 1% of the population) indigenous population….

And you can find the indigenous presence in the deep, dark soil of Izalco’s history. Almost all of the children from Izalco’s Mario Calvo school pictured above are descendants-great, great and great, great, great, grandchildren- of the 20,000-30,000 indigenous people who rebelled against deadly poverty and abuse and were then slaughtered in 1932 by General Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez, the dictator who perpetrated what is known as “La Matanza” (the Great Killing). Martinez and his troops did all this in less than a month, according to scholars like my friend Aldo Lauria-Santiago, whose book is pictured below with a cover of the Izalco volcano.

Read the entire article aqui.

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