Protests in
Mexico Push Country to Brink of Revolution
By Nick Bernabe
January 11,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Antimedia"
-
San Diego,
CA— Long-simmering
social tensions in Mexico are threatening to boil over
as failing neoliberal
reforms to the country’s formerly nationalized gas
sector are compounded by open corruption, stagnant
standards of living, and rampant inflation.
The U.S. media
has remained mostly mute on the situation in Mexico,
even as the unfolding civil unrest has closed the
U.S.-Mexico border in San Diego, California,
several times in the past week. Ongoing “gasolinazo”
protests in Mexico over a 20 percent rise is gas prices
have led to over 400 arrests, 250 looted stores, and six
deaths. Roads are being blockaded, borders closed, and
government buildings are being sacked. Protests have
remained relatively peaceful overall, except for several
isolated violent acts, which activists have
blamed on government infiltrators.
#VIDEO:
Difunden momento exacto en que Policías
Federales son arrollados por un vehículo en
Rosarito, Baja California
pic.twitter.com/r3SknjOQjJ
The few
mainstream news reports that have covered the situation
blame rising gas prices but fail to examine several
other factors that are pushing Mexico to the brink of
revolution.
‘Narco-state’
corruption
The narco-state,
or as Mexican activists say, “el
narco-gobierno,” is a term used to describe the open
corruption between the Mexican government and drug
cartels. The narco-state has
been in the headlines lately over the kidnapping and
presumed murder of 43 Ayotzinapa students in Iguala,
Guerrero, in 2014. This has been a source of continuous
anti-government protests ever since.
Though the
kidnappings remain officially unsolved, members of the
Guerrero Unidos drug cartel have
admitted to colluding with local police forces to
silence the student activists. Twenty police officers
have been arrested in association with the kidnapping.
Former Iguala police chief Felipe Flores has been
arrested and “accused of offenses including organized
crime and kidnapping the students,” the AP
reports. The corruption apparently goes all
the way to the top, as federal authorities say former
Iguala mayor José Luis Abarca
personally ordered the kidnappings.
One
Mexican activist who wished to remain anonymous told
Anti-Media that “a lot of
people think it’s only the gasoline prices, but the
price of gas is just the straw that broke the camel’s
back. It all started with Ayotzinapa.”
Much like the
U.S., the Mexican government is susceptible to corporate
influence. It just so happens that the most influential
corporate entities in Mexico are drug cartels — and it’s
hard for the government to reign in entities that fund
and infiltrate it. Similar to the phenomenon of “regulatory
capture,” the Mexican government is at least
partially funded and co-opted by drug cartels. This
festering problem is an underlying factor in the current
civil unrest in Mexico.
Neoliberal policies
left the working class behind
NAFTA was a
contentious issue in the 2016 U.S. presidential
election, but it’s just as
controversial in Mexico, if not more so. The grand
1994 “free trade” scheme, signed into law by Bill
Clinton, saw a dramatic redesign of both the U.S. and
Mexican economic landscapes. Corn farmers, long a vital
factor in Mexico’s peasant farming economy, were
wiped out by low-priced corn subsidized by the U.S.
government, which immediately flooded Mexican markets
after NAFTA was passed. The Mexican
immigration crisis at the U.S.’ southern border soon
followed.
Meanwhile,
manufacturing plants soon began moving into Mexico from
the U.S. to take advantage of extremely cheap labor —
leaving many workers in the U.S. out of a job. American
agricultural corporations like Driscoll’s have recently
come under fire for
employing slave-like labor conditions to produce
boutique organic fruit for U.S. consumers. Protests for
workers rights in Mexico, which recently raised its
minimum wage to 80 pesos (~$4) per day, are often
met with heavy-handed police crackdowns.
Incoming
President Trump has capitalized on two issues caused by
NAFTA — the immigration crisis and outsourcing of U.S.
jobs — and his reactionary protectionist economic
policies will undoubtedly make Mexico’s predicament
even worse.
Mexico’s
nationalized oil conglomerate, Pemex, has been plagued
by
falling production for years. Corruption, which is
inherent to state-run institutions, has condemned
Mexico’s gas industry to inefficiency and stalled
innovation. Theft has become a
widespread issue, and oil workers were recently
caught red-handed siphoning gas directly out of
pipelines.
Supposedly to
ramp up production and lower prices, the Mexican
government pushed through neoliberal
privatization schemes in 2013 and 2014, which were
backed by
U.S. oil interests and incubated by the Hillary
Clinton-run State Department. President Enrique Peña
Nieto promised the reforms would result in increased
production and lower fuel prices, though production has
fallen and prices spiked 20 percent on January 1st.
Prices are expected to rise even further, as fuel
subsidies will be completely phased out by March 2017.
Peña Nieto claims the prices must go up to match
international prices, though consumers in the U.S.
currently pay less for gas than Mexicans.
Peña Nieto’s
neoliberal reforms have fallen flat as
economic growth has been anemic for years and wealth
inequality has grown out of control.
Rampant inflation in
Mexico
Perhaps the
biggest driver of the current civil upheaval in Mexico
is
out of control inflation coupled with the value of
the
peso reaching record lows. Mexican workers are
already stretched thin financially as minimum wage
hovers at four U.S. dollars per day. Food prices, which
were on the rise before the gas price increases, are set
to climb 20 percent or more as they
correlate closely with prices at the pump.
According to
Zero Hedge, in Mexico, it currently
takes “the equivalent of 12 days of a minimum wage to
fill a tank of gas — compared to the U.S.’ seven hours.”
People who don’t drive will also feel the pain, as
public transportation costs are likely to rise with fuel
prices. Rising gas prices also put
downward pressure on the rest of the Mexican economy
as workers spend more money on gas and less on consumer
goods.
The Mexican
government’s deficit spending and
Trump’s tough talk on trade have been factors in
devaluing the peso, making everything in Mexico more
expensive for the working class and driving the general
discontent that makes the country a hotbed of unrest.
***
Overall, no one
factor can be blamed for causing extreme levels of
unrest in Mexico. Before the Ayotzinapa student
kidnappings, Mexico was already seeing widespread
protests, marches, and strikes. The last several
presidential elections have been contested, and the
current administration of Enrique Peña Nieto has only a
22 percent approval rating. The general feeling of
helplessness in the face of narco-state corruption and
economic insecurity is not going away with the next
election or protest, and wealth inequality in the
country is beyond remedy. Mexico is ripe for revolution.
Whether it’s triggered now by the gas gouging and
subsequent inflation or in the near future, it’s
coming — and we should be talking about it.
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