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[Marxism] PSL: FMLN defeats decades of rightwing rule




URL: http://www.pslweb.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=11559

FMLN defeats decades of rightwing rule
Thursday, March 19, 2009
By: Carlos Alvarez

Elections part of growing progressive tide in Latin America

On March 15, 2009, Mauricio Funes of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation
Front (FMLN) declared victory in El Salvador’s presidential election. He
defeated Rodrigo Avila, presidential candidate of the rightwing National
Republican Alliance (ARENA) by 51.3 to 48.7 percent. There are 4.2 million
registered voters; 60 percent turned out to vote.

The FMLN is an electoral party with historic, revolutionary roots in the
country’s 12-year-long civil war, from 1980 to 1992. ARENA, which has been the
ruling party in El Salvador for the last 20 years, arose out of U.S. sponsored
death squads that claimed the lives of tens of thousands during the civil war.
In the recent election, Salvadorans poured into the voting booths in record
numbers to repudiate the plutocratic rule of ARENA.

Perhaps only outdone in Latin America by Colombia in its subservience to the
United States, El Salvador’s government has historically aligned itself with
even the most internationally detested machinations of U.S. imperialism. El
Salvador was the first country in Latin America to send troops into Iraq and
was the last country to take them out.

El Salvador’s economy lies in shambles and the deterioration of living
conditions accelerated tenfold following the nation’s conversion to the U.S.
dollar in 2001. The percentage of jobs in the informal economy has reached an
estimated 40 percent over the last few years. Millions of Salvadoran workers
are living under conditions of super-exploitation and extreme poverty.

During ARENA’s 20 years in power, the nation’s prison population swelled by
over 370 percent as a result of a vicious anti-worker campaign disguised as a
governmental anti-gang offensive called "la mano dura" or hard hand.

People’s indignation at ARENA’s rule brought them out to vote for the FMLN in
the hopes of bringing about lasting change to the country. The elections have
served as the barometer of popular sentiment in the nation’s working masses.

José Marroquín, a taxi driver in the nation’s capital of San Salvador, spoke
with Liberation newspaper about the reasons he voted for the FMLN. He insisted,
"We want real lasting change. The upper echelon is in power and the people have
no say. There is too much poverty and everything has become unaffordable. There
is nothing to alleviate the worker and ARENA will only work to continue to make
the wealthy even wealthier."

Rightwing propaganda campaign ineffective

Voters had to first see past a well-financed ARENA campaign meant to discredit
the FMLN. The propaganda campaign was supported and financed by Washington.

The anti-FMLN campaign included two U.S. members of congress, Trent Franks of
Arizona and Dan Burton of Indiana, threatening Salvadoran immigrants in the
United States with sanctions if the FMLN were to win. They threatened to take
away the Temporary Protected Status afforded to some Salvadoran immigrants as a
result of the U.S.-funded civil war. They also threatened to cut remittances,
which would endanger the livelihoods of millions of people in El Salvador who
survive on money sent from Salvadorans in the United States every day. All the
threats were not enough, however, to dissuade a populous dangerously aggravated
by the increased exploitation and oppression of ARENA—supported by U.S.
imperialism. .

Just hours before Election Day began, ARENA scattered anti-FMLN propaganda from
airplanes. This move was clearly in violation of election rules since all
campaigning is supposed to officially cease 3 days prior to the election.

Reacting to a growing red-scare campaign by ARENA, Funes campaigned for "real
change" but vowed to retain free-trade and other policies that contributed to
El Salvador’s economic crisis. He said he would not lift El Salvador's amnesty
for civil war crimes, nor push for the revision of the Central American Free
Trade Agreement (CAFTA), and would not reverse El Salvador's 2001 adoption of
the U.S. dollar as its currency.

He tried to fend off accusations of being aligned with Venezuela’s
revolutionary process or socialist Cuba, comparing his future role closer to
Brazil’s bourgeois-democratic leader Luis Inacio "Lula" da Silva.

On the campaign trail, Funes embraced comparisons between himself and President
Barack Obama and borrowed the rhetoric of "change" and "hope." Regardless of
whether or not the FMLN embraced these comparisons, El Salvador is not an
imperialist country like the United States.

What does Funes victory mean for the Salvadoran people?

For millions of Salvadorans, the victory of the FMLN represents hope and raises
the potential for mobilizing the masses, whose expectations for change are
great. In this light, the revolutionary history of the FMLN is now an asset.

So what does Funes’s victory actually represent for the working class of El
Salvador? Will El Salvador move in the direction of Venezuela or even socialist
Cuba? Or will El Salvador follow the paths of Brazil and Argentina? The
progressive governments of Brazil and Argentina have looked to strengthen the
national bourgeoisie by distancing themselves from U.S. imperialism while
affording the working class only limited social reforms.

Projecting clear answers to these questions right now without first observing
how things develop in the course of struggle would mean drawing inadequate and
un-materialist conclusions. We can, however, begin to understand the role that
the FMLN plays for the Salvadoran working class today based on its history.

FMLN’s history of struggle

For 12 years, and even prior to the start of the war, the FMLN and the
organizations that it consisted of were the organizational leadership of the
people in their struggle against military dictatorship. Always a multi-tendency
organization, the FMLN carried out a revolutionary war against the U.S.-funded
Salvadoran government.

Over 75,000 people died in the civil war and many thousands more were
disappeared. This is a high percentage considering the country’s total
population at that time was 6 million.

Viewing the war as one of the fronts in the Cold War—the imperialist struggle
to overthrow the socialist camp—the United States set out to squelch the
revolutionary upsurge in El Salvador at any cost. CIA involvement and U.S.
military training beefed up the Salvadoran capitalist state to carry out one of
the bloodiest civil wars in Latin America.

The FMLN arose from the organizational unity of five distinct revolutionary
organizations in October of 1980—the Salvadoran Communist Party (PCS), the
Popular Liberation Forces (FPL), the Revolutionary People’s Army (ERP), the
Armed Forces of National Resistance (FARN) and the Revolutionary Party of
Central American Workers (PRTC.)

These groups ranged from ideologically socialist organizations fighting for the
overthrow of the capitalist state to armed formations of radical peasants and
workers fighting to overcome super-exploitation and vile state-sponsored
repression.

During the war, membership in the ranks of the FMLN was based on membership
within the distinct organizational and theoretical factions of the FMLN.
Workers and peasants were thus recruited into a revolutionary armed
organization with a single command structure but varying political
orientations. The FMLN was organized under the reality of doing battle with an
enemy that was far bigger and had far greater resources.

The assassinations of prominent popular opposition leaders, such as Archbishop
Oscar Romero, only deepened the nation’s hatred for the brutal government. The
intensity of the war crimes and assassinations carried out by the government
increased the mass popularity of the FMLN during the war.

A guerrilla radio station by the name of "Radio Venceremos" was the
centralizing tool for the FMLN to coordinate its military operations and keep
the working masses abreast of revolutionary victories that the government tried
to suppress. Many were executed on the spot when Salvadoran soldiers found
anyone listening to Radio Venceremos. Many Salvadorans risked their lives just
trying to tune their radios to the signal of the revolution.

The FMLN emerged as the organizational leader of the Salvadoran working class
as a result of its role during the war. The FMLN and the Salvadoran government
signed peace accords in 1992 under great pressure from the United States. This
was after an FMLN offensive in November 1989 that demonstrated its strength and
the U.S.-backed Salvadoran government’s inability to defeat the guerrillas
militarily. Exhausted by years of brutal repression and massacres by the
neo-fascist D’Aubuisson government, the civilian population did not rise up to
support the FMLN offensive.

The revolutionary struggles of both Nicaragua and El Salvador were defeated by
U.S. wars and the resulting reactionary governments bankrupted and impoverished
those countries to a dramatic degree.

Since the 1992 peace accords, the FMLN has developed into a mass electoral
party that has gained popularity among the masses due to the utter failure of
the rightwing to resolve the critical economic situation. It has also gained
stature as a participant in the growing alliance of popular Latin American
parties that have won electoral victories since the 1998 Venezuelan election of
Hugo Chávez.

Electoral victory part of Latin American shift to the left

With Chávez in Venezuela, Evo Morales in Bolivia, Rafael Correa in Ecuador,
Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, and Argentina’s and Brazil’s rejection of U.S.
imperialist attempts to isolate socialist Cuba, the FMLN was able to gain
breathing space and articulate progressive change.

Yet there are tremendous challenges ahead for the Salvadoran masses. Despite
the U.S. State Department’s claim of neutrality regardless of the election
outcome, Washington’s interventionist history indicates otherwise. For example,
since Daniel Ortega’s election in Nicaragua in 2007, the U.S. government has
actively worked to create an opposition and to destabilize the economy.

Revolutionaries and progressives in the United States must continue to defend
the FMLN and the Salvadoran people against the threats and attacks of U.S.
imperialism. We must be steadfast in our defense of immigrant workers that have
been forced out of their nations in an effort to survive the ravages of
neoliberalism. We must fight back against the racist war on immigrants here at
home. The struggle against national oppression and imperialism is part and
parcel of the struggle for socialism.

The Party for Socialism and Liberation sees much reason for optimism in the
shift to the left throughout Latin America. Cuba continues to guide the
hemisphere and the world as an example of what a society based on meeting the
needs of workers could look like. Cuba stands out as an example because workers
are in power.

Under the leadership of Fidel Castro and the July 26 Movement in alliance with
other revolutionaries, Cuba was able to dismantle the capitalist state and
build a workers state that could defend the gains of the revolution.

Venezuela has learned and continues to learn from the experience of Cuba.
Bolivia is following suit. Each of these countries has their own particular
conditions that have shaped the organizational tools of their respective
working classes in different ways. However, nothing short of a revolution can
ultimately guarantee the needs of workers.

How the FMLN’s victory will affect the Salvadoran working class in the coming
months and years to come remains to be seen. Like the taxi driver José
Marroquín, the Salvadoran people want "real lasting change." Surely this is not
the last we will hear of the fascist elements of the ARENA party or U.S.
imperialist intervention in El Salvador. Today, however, there is much to
celebrate for Salvadorans as they have successfully turned back the
ultra-right’s consolidation of power over the last 20 years.

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