José Mujica - The World’s
“Poorest President”
By Natasha Hakimi
Uruguay’s President José
Mujica is not your run-of-the-mill
leader. AP/Matilde
Campodonico
January 19, 2015 "ICH"
- "Truthdig"
-
The world’s “humblest”
president, the “poorest president” in terms
of personal wealth, the “most radical.” How
did one man earn so many superlative
epithets?
The 79-year-old Uruguayan
President José Mujica—who leaves office at
the end of next month—is at first glance an
unlikely head of state. In keeping with the
approach he developed while imprisoned for
14 years as a leftist Tupamaro urban
guerrilla, Mujica repudiates materialism.
Although the Broad Front party leader has
been president of the now booming Latin
American country since 2010, you won’t see
him boasting the trappings of power that
other world leaders embrace. His clothes are
simple, his home is a “ramshackle”
flower farm he refused to leave for the
fully staffed presidential palace. His car,
which for a long time was his only physical
asset, is a plain 1987 Volkswagen
Beetle. But while these superficial
facts may have indeed earned “El Pepe” a
superlative or two, it’s what he’s done
during his five-year term that has won him
the hearts of his people as well as other
nations’ respect.
The act that gained him
the title “the poorest president in the
world” was his decision to donate 90 percent
of his monthly $12,000 presidential salary
to charities, largely organizations that
assist single mothers. His donations, which
have totaled $550,000, brought his
salary down to the Uruguayan average of
roughly $775 per month. Though there are
ways Mujica could make a bit of spare
change, such as charging rent to the 14
other people who live on his farmland, he’s
simply uninterested in doing so. “I’m called
‘the poorest president,’ ” he says, “but I
don’t feel poor. Poor people are those who
only work to try to keep an expensive
lifestyle, and always want more and more.”
“This is a matter of
freedom,” he continues. “If you don’t have
many possessions then you don’t need to work
all your life like a slave to sustain them,
and therefore you have more time for
yourself.” And yet, the once revolutionary
militant says he doesn’t reject
capitalism—on the contrary, he “needs [it]
to work.” In a move that some of his former
compañeros on the left criticize him
for, Mujica has become a democratic
socialist. But his reason for embracing the
economic system that has been blamed for
growing wealth gaps across the globe is
based on noble and pragmatic reasons in the
president’s mind. “I have to levy taxes,”
Mujica told
The Guardian in a recent interview, “to
attend to the serious problems we have.
Trying to overcome it all too abruptly
condemns the people you are fighting for to
suffering, so that instead of more bread,
you have less bread.”
Under Mujica and his
predecessor, Tabaré Vásquez, who not only
also belongs to the Broad Front party but
will replace Mujica when he finishes his
term March 1, the nation has witnessed an
economic boom fueled by the agricultural
industry and a dramatic decrease in poverty
from 40 to 12 percent in the past 10 years.
The minimum wage has increased by 50 percent
and the Uruguayan wealth gap has narrowed.
Moreover, the 75 percent increase in the
economy has allowed for social spending to
expand, money that has gone in part toward
funding education and has, for example,
allowed every schoolchild to have his or her
own laptop computer. Mujica has also focused
on enacting environmentally friendly
policies and limiting consumption, an
approach consistent with the speech he gave
at the 2012 Rio+20 Summit in which he
stated, “We can almost recycle everything
now. If we lived within our means—by being
prudent—the 7 billion people in the world
could have everything they needed. Global
politics should be moving in that
direction.”
But not all of the Broad
Front leader’s policies have been as welcome
as free laptops. Mujica has also approved
controversial legislation, such as the
legalization of gay marriage and of
abortions during the first 12 weeks of
pregnancy. Perhaps most controversially,
under his rule Uruguay became the first
country to legalize the production and sale
of marijuana. Mujica explains that in his
view the true dangers of drugs lie in
trafficking, not consumption. The quixotic
president, who says he has never smoked
cannabis, explains that the approach to
narcotics in Latin America for the past 80
years has failed and that his government has
instead decided to regulate marijuana sales,
which “naturally, has to be done by the
state.” He adds, “We want to take users out
of hiding and create a situation where we
can say: ‘You are overdoing it. You have to
deal with that.’ It is a question of
limits.”
Despite the waves the
marijuana law has caused in his own country,
Mujica has pressed more developed nations to
follow in Uruguay’s footsteps and adjust
their drug policies. This bold advice isn’t
the only instance in which the “world’s most
radical president,” as he’s been called, has
stood up to his counterparts and demanded a
sweeping change. Mujica, in fact, played a
crucial role in the recent
shift in relations between the United
States and Cuba, having urged several times
that President Barack Obama revise American
policy toward Cuba; the Uruguayan has also
offered to take in a number of detainees
held in Guantanamo Bay to speed up the
detention center’s closure. Mujica doesn’t
stop at dealing forthrightly with fellow
presidents. He has continued to be a vocal
critic of tobacco, calling it a “killer,”
despite the fact that cigarette giant Philip
Morris is
suing Uruguay over its legislation
requiring warning labels on tobacco products
and prohibiting smoking in public areas. As
far as other international disagreements go,
despite his once militant approach to
politics the Uruguayan president “professes
a hatred for modern war, but also scorns
‘beatific pacifism.’ ” In this sense, he has
come a long way from the past that shaped
him, although, evidenced by his sometimes
colorful use of language and his propensity
to stand up to bullies, he hasn’t lost the
revolutionary spunk that inspired him to
join the Tupamaro guerrilla movement (also
known as the Movimiento de Liberación
Nacional, or MLN) in the 1960s when his
country was turning increasingly corrupt.
Though Mujica says he
avoided violence whenever possible, the MLN,
once called “Robin Hood guerrillas” for
their history of hijacking food delivery
trucks to distribute their loot to slums,
eventually became intensely violent when
faced with an aggressive government
response. The movement went from robbing
banks to expose corruption to leading what
was described as a terrorist campaign of
kidnappings and even targeted bombings. Some
critics have gone so far as to blame the
rise of the Uruguayan dictatorship in the
1970s on the Tupamaros. In the eyes of these
critics, it was the government’s knee-jerk
response to guerrilla violence that caused
authorities to call on the military and
ultimately led to a military coup. Today
Mujica, who was shot six times by police,
was tortured and spent the entire
dictatorship in solitary confinement, has no
regrets about his actions. He says he didn’t
hide his past during his presidential
campaign nor does he turn away from it now,
and though he says he wasn’t elected for
being a Tupamaro he also admits, “I wouldn’t
be the person I am if I hadn’t lived through
those years [in prison].” He expresses a
similarly philosophical sentiment about his
torturers, saying he holds no hard feelings
against them, because they were merely
“instruments in other people’s hands.”
Under Uruguayan law
presidents cannot serve a second consecutive
five-year term, but Mujica says
this limitation is no source of
displeasure for him. After he leaves the
presidency he plans to spend more time with
his wife, former Tupamaro fighter Lucía
Topolansky, and Manuela, his three-legged
dog, while resuming his seat in the
country’s senate. After Mujica leaves office
it will be easy for his admirers to give in
to nostalgia and obsess about his plucky and
progressive presidency, but that’s not what
the “world’s humblest president” wants. Just
last week, after thousands of his fans
planned to organize an homage to the
outgoing president, “El Pepe” publicly
pleaded that they refrain because, in his
words, this is a time to look “forwards, not
backwards.” He
asked his supporters to share their
addresses with him via social media so he
could arrange to meet with them under
different circumstances; after all, he said,
“I like smaller reunions better.” For his
continued humility, his courageous efforts
in the fight against inequality and his
eccentric yet sincere approach to
leadership, José Mujica is our Truthdigger
of the Week.
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