Free Fallin’: Mexico’s PRD at the brink
Over a month ago, I wrote about the struggle within Mexico’s Left party, the PRD, between the radicals and the moderates, and I argued that the party’s internal elections were a critical juncture. In these elections, I opined, the party would choose who it wanted to be: a political party that attempts to operate through parliamentary rules and pressure, or a social movement that uses non-institutional means to advance its agenda.
Today, I still think I was right about what was at stake in these elections. However, I got the date and the stage for this epic struggle badly wrong. Today, on April 28, the internal elections are still mired in controversy, and no official president has been declared. In the meantime, the initiative has been taken by AMLO and the radicals, who, in a spectacular manoeuvre of political theatre, physically took over and closed down the Congress for two weeks to pressure the president to allow a longer period of debate on the reform of the state-owned oil company, PEMEX.
The radicals won the procedural victory, and the country got its Congress back. But what of the party? The decision to pursue this line of action has further deepened the schism between the radicals and moderates. If Alberto Encinas, who is backed by AMLO, takes over the presidency of the PRD, as looks increasingly likely, the party will shift dramatically toward the radicals. The moderates will most likely be purged, if they do not end up leaving on their own.
A shift between moderate and radical wings of a party does not necessarily hold any deep significance for democracy, but in this case, unfortunately, Mexico is likely to pay a heavy price. The party will be further deinstitutionalized, and will ultimately serve solely as a vehicle for the ambitions of its charismatic leader, AMLO. It will also continue to undermine attempts to build a responsible, democratic Left which participates in parliamentary debates and is willing to negotiate reforms with the Right. We have already seen the effects of this kind of behaviour: the PAN and the PRI passed 14 bills during the takeover of Congress without the participation of the PRD.
Unless AMLO really does lead a revolution, Mexico will continue to be governed by the state, and not by the streets. If the Left has no serious representation within that state, policymaking may shift further to the Right, and disaffection with politics is likely to grow. This could plausibly lead to a revolution one day, but it isn’t clear that AMLO would lead it, or that he would like the results. Latin American revolutions have a tendency to lead to counter-revolutions. And those tend not to be pretty.
