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On Sunday, April 15, the masses of workers and peasants of Ecuador
delivered a blow against the oligarchy and imperialism by voting massively
in favour of calling a Constituent Assembly. The final results announced
by the Supreme Electoral Tribunal were 5,350,000 votes for the Constituent
Assembly (81,72%), and barely 824,000 against (12,43%).
The scale of the victory surprised all commentators. In only three of
the country's 22 provinces did the Yes vote score below 80%. Even in the
province of Guayas, where the country's second largest city Guayaquil is
located and a traditional stronghold of the country's oligarchy, the vote
was 75% in favour and 18% against. The Yes vote reached 87% in the
provinces of Azuay, el Oro, Imbabura, Loja, and 85% in Carchi, Pichincha,
Tungurahua and Zamora Chinchipe.
The referendum campaign was extremely polarised with all the
country's traditional parties opposing the current president Rafael Correa
in his proposal of a Constituent Assembly. The mass media, in a campaign
reminiscent of those waged against Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez,
accused Correa of being an authoritarian, a communist, dug up all sort of
dirt on his past and his family and generally created an extremely
polarised atmosphere.
For all these reasons the Yes vote in the referendum has to be seen
as a reflection of a deep seated opposition to all political parties and
to the political system as a whole.
10 years of revolutionary movements
Ecuador has lived through nearly 10 years of social turmoil. The last
president to finish his full term of office was Sixto Durán in 1996. The
same year saw the election of the populist Abdalah Buccaram, who became
known as Buccaram "the mad". Having been elected on the basis of demagogic
promises he immediately introduced an IMF-recommended structural
adjustment plan which led to a wave of protests culminating in a general
strike in February 1997. He tried to quell protests by sending the troops
against demonstrators but finally had to flee the country.
The next elected president Jamil Mahuad followed the same policies
and was soon facing a number of general strikes and movements of the
country's powerful organisation of indigenous peasants, the CONAIE. In
January 2000 he decreed the dollarisation of the country's economy, which
was the spark for the revolutionary events that culminated in a national
uprising and the setting up of a parallel Parliament of the Peoples which,
with the support of a section of junior military officers, briefly took
power on January 20 and 21 (see: The uprising
in Ecuador marks the beginning of the 21st century). The movement was
derailed back into bourgeois parliamentarism but was a clear _expression_ of
the anger of the majority of Ecuadorians caused by the crisis of
capitalism and of a deep mistrust towards the political institutions of
bourgeois democracy which had proven useless as a vehicle for the masses
to solve their problems.
November 2002 saw the election of Lucio Gutierrez, one of the army
officers that sided with the people in January 2000 as the country's new
president (see: Ecuador -
Lucio Gutierrez victory opens a new revolutionary stage). He had the
support of the workers' and peasants' movement and great hopes were put on
him. However, he soon moved towards following IMF dictated policies and to
attack the trade union movement. Demoralisation with his government
culminated in a new movement of the masses in April 2005 which overthrew
the Gutierrez government. An interim administration was set up, headed by
Palacios, and with Rafael Correa as a finance minister (see: Ecuador:
Popular uprising overthrows Lucio Gutierrez).
It is interesting to note that despite the demoralisation that flowed
from the betrayal of Lucio Gutierrez, the masses of workers and peasants
have rallied again once a clear leadership has been offered to them. This
is in part the result of the development and continuation of the
Venezuelan revolution, which serves as an example and a source of
inspiration throughout the continent.
What we see clearly is how the masses once and again have taken the
route of mass mobilisations and direct action to try and bring fundamental
change. They have been able to overthrow 4 different governments in less
than 10 years. This reveals that there is an enormous reservoir of
strength in the mass movement of workers and peasants in Ecuador. The
problem is that every single time they have been deceived.
The masses and the Constituent Assembly
From the beginning Correa had a clear programme: no signing of the
FTA with the United States, end the contract for the US military basis in
Manta and to organise a referendum to call a Constituent Assembly. The
latter was the key point of his campaign and was seen by the Ecuadorian
masses as a chance to get rid of the whole of the political system in the
country, always dominated by less than 200 families that make up Ecuador's
oligarchy. So insistent was Correa about doing away with the country's
political set up that he deliberately refused to put forward any
candidates for the National Assembly.
The choice was clearly expressed by the candidate opposing Correa in
the second round of the presidential election: banana plantation magnate
Alvaro Noboa, the country's wealthiest man (with assets worth an estimated
US$1bn). In a very polarised campaign Correa soundly defeated Noboa by 58%
to 41%.
The last few months have been marked by the battle over the calling
of the referendum for the Constituent Assembly. The country's Supreme
Electoral Tribunal agreed to Correa's proposal, and when members of the
national assembly tried to block it, the Electoral Court suspended 57 of
them. This was accompanied by demonstrations of Correa's supporters
surrounding parliament to prevent the suspended assembly members from
going in.
It is in this context that the masses of Ecuador have put their hopes
in the Constituent Assembly, which they see not just as a way of changing
the country's constitution but as a the beginning of a radical
transformation of their lives, as they can see is happening in Venezuela.
Indigenous peasant leader Humberto Cholango before the referendum was
convinced that "millions of conscious poor that demand change will prevail
against the millions of dollars of the pro-imperialists". Reflecting what
is behind this massive vote he asked: "How is it possible that 173 people
are the owners of 3 million hectares of land in this country and control
most of the water... it is time to rise up and put an end to this
injustice. Oil and water must belong to all".
The president of the powerful peasant indigenous confederation
CONAIE, Luis Macas, added: "We are going to rule from the Constituent
Assembly. We are going to brush aside the old state and put an end to the
privileges of a handful of rich"
The first announcement of president Correa after the referendum was
that Ecuador was going to pay off the remainder of its debt to the IMF,
break all further links with that institution and expel the representative
of the World Bank from the country. This move, which has also been taken
by Venezuela this week, without being as radical as a full repudiation of
the foreign debt, surely has a powerful symbolic impact on the minds of
the masses as well as on the minds of the oligarchy and imperialism.
Like in Venezuela, even the attempt of Correa to make the rich pay
taxes has become a revolutionary move. According to figures compiled by
ALAI journalist Eduardo Tamayo, the 17 largest economic groups in the
country control 563 companies and have an annual income of 5 billion
dollars (14% of the country's GDP), but their tax payments represent only
6% of the state's tax revenue. Amongst these groups is Noboa's own company
with an annual turnover of more than 500 million dollars and annual
profits of 3.9 million.
It is this obscene concentration of wealth and power in the hands of
a small number of families linked and subservient to US imperialism,
together with the fact that between 60 to 70% of the population live below
the poverty line, that makes social conditions in Ecuador so explosive.
The number of Ecuadorians forced to emigrate from their country has gone
over the 2 million mark (mainly to Spain and the US); this in a country of
barely 13 million inhabitants. For the masses the Constituent Assembly is
not viewed just as a change of form of government but as a way to achieve
radical change in their living conditions.
Lessons from Venezuela
President Correa's programme is not a socialist programme of bringing
the wealth of these 200 families into public ownership and democratic
planning and redistributing the land they owned. But like in Venezuela,
even a programme of progressive reforms backed by the mass mobilisation
and organisation of workers and peasants, is a direct threat to the rule
of the oligarchy, the wealthy landowners, banana magnates, bank owners and
captains of industry who have dominated the country since its foundation
to the benefit of US imperialism. In Venezuela the oligarchy and
imperialism organised a military uprising against Hugo Chávez. If Correa
stays true to his programme of reforms, there is no doubt that the
oligarchy and imperialism are going to try the same thing.
The campaign to prepare for his violent overthrow has already
started. A deafening chorus in the media, particularly in Spain and in the
US, is preparing public opinion, by accusing Rafael Correa of being an
authoritarian who is concentrating all power into his own hands.
Following his Venezuelan counterpart, Rafael Correa has also come out
in favour of socialism. This is really the only solution. The experience
of the revolutionary movement in Venezuela shows that there are three main
obstacles that need to be overcome for the revolution to succeed:
- One is the question of the state apparatus. As Marxists have always
argued, the old state machinery cannot be taken over and used to serve
the interests of working people, it must be destroyed and replaced by a
new form of organisation based on democratic assemblies and elected and
recallable representatives. The Ecuadorian masses already have the
experience of the Peoples' Parliaments that were set up during the
January 2000 revolution.
- Two is the question of the economy. While important sections of the
country's economy remain in private hands the ruling class will use them
to sabotage the democratic will of the majority. In Ecuador this means
the expropriation of the wealthiest 200 families and imperialist
companies that own the natural resources, the land, the banks and
industry.
- And three is the question of the revolutionary organisation. This
must be democratic and based on the mass activity of workers and
peasants.
What needs to be understood clearly from the Venezuelan experience is
that the masses can only rely on their own strength, organisation and
mobilisation in order to implement and defend revolutionary change. The
Constituent Assembly can be a tool used by the masses, but cannot solve
all their problems. For ten years the Ecuadorian masses have brought into
office and then removed a number of governments in an attempt to improve
their conditions. Now it is necessary to understand that only by the
taking over of the fundamental levers of the economy by the workers and
peasants themselves can this be achieved.
The next few months and years will see a further sharpening of the
class struggle in Ecuador. The most advanced elements need to draw all the
necessary conclusions and organise to give a clear leadership to the
movement.
See also:
- Ecuador:
Neither the millions of dollars, nor the corrupt brown envelopes could
defeat the dignity of the people by Dax Toscano (November 28,
2007)
- Ecuador
looks to the left in presidential election by Rob Sewell (October
12, 2006)
- Ecuador:
State of emergency declared to halt protests by Patrick Larsen
(March 27, 2006)
- Ecuador:
New explosions are being prepared by Patrick Larsen (March 3, 2006)
- Ecuador:
Interview with Marcelo Roman, historic leader of the oil workers' trade
union (February 23, 2006)
- Ecuador:
Popular uprising overthrows Lucio Gutierrez by Miriam Municio (April
21, 2005)
- Brutal
repression against teachers' strike in Ecuador by Jorge Martin
(December 12, 2003)
- Ecuador
- Lucio Gutierrez victory opens a new revolutionary stage by Julian
Costas (November 26, 2002)
- 10
Days Which Shook Ecuador by Jorge Martin (February 14, 2001)
- Ecuador,
2 months after the revolution by Jorge Martin (March 14, 2000)
- The
uprising in Ecuador marks the beginning of the 21st century by Jorge
Martin (January 23, 2000)
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