More photos at my Flickr page

About

  • I’m Miguel Centellas, a political science professor at Mount St. Mary’s University. Because of academic interests, I post frequently on Bolivian politics. I also occasionally discuss interesting books, pop culture, and daily life in Baltimore.
  • Send questions & comments by email.

The Coffee Table

The Reference Desk

Noticias de Bolivia

  • A selected list of Bolivian news media:
  • Blogroll

President vs. courts (part 2)

May 23, 2007
Tags:

The conflict between Bolivia’s president, Evo Morales, and the judicial system continues (previous post). Yesterday, the head of the supreme court resigned. The other court ministers have stated that they’ll resist the executive branch. But a MAS spokesperson threatened to topple the court through social pressure. This is the same kind of threat made January against Cochabamba’s prefect; clashes there left three dead & several injured in January.

This is really the most troubling thing about the current government. Its most frequently used tactic is social mobilization, which is more a tactic of opposition rather than of government. But they’re unwillingness to cede any political terrain suggests that MAS is unwilling to entertain the notion of political defeat. Having seized the reigns of power, MAS consistently seems to want more. And any institutionalized opposition is threatened with a battering ram of “social mobilization”—clearly an intimidation tactic—even while any counter-mobilization is dismissed (apparently only groups allied w/ MAS count as “social movements”).

Adam Przeworski once defined democracy (minimally) as “a system in which parties lose elections.” That is, if parties in power demonstrate that they’re not willing to lose an election & walk away from power, then one seriously questions that regime’s democratic credentials. If this continues, one is left to wonder whether any elections in 2008 would be “free & fair” in any meaningful sense.

Post this to: Digg del.icio.us Facebook Newsvine reddit Technorati Google


Comments

...I'd submit that another elemnet of a democratic system would be branches of government that are independent of each other (i.e., not controlled by another branch of government). Clearly, an independent judiciary can get members of the executive branch or political parties in trouble, so it's an obvious threat, in this case to the Morales government and to MAS. Getting reelected forever is another threat, of course, and.... wait, isn't someone already doing these things in Venezuela?

Posted by Tambopaxi May 26, 2007 10:34 PM


    The Basics

    Search


    Categories

    Archives

    Posta Classico