Transcript Slide 1

Mexico
America’s Friend to the South
I. Sovereignty, Authority, & Power
A. Legitimacy
 Viceroy – Governor appointed by Spanish
king during colonial period
▫ Centralized, authoritarian rule with
virtually no participation by the
indigenous population
A. Legitimacy Continued
• Revolution of 1910-1921 – Mexicans have admired
revolutionary leaders throughout their history.
Revolutions in general are seen quite positively, and
charisma is highly valued as a leadership characteristic
▫ Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) – helped legitimize
the revolution, served as an important source of government
legitimacy until the late 20th century
▫ Constitution of 1917 – created a democratic, three-branch
government, but allowed the PRI to stabilize and consolidate
power within the hands of its leaders.
II. Historical Traditions
• Authoritarianism – from Spanish colonial
structure and strong-armed tactics of military-political
leaders (caudillos) such as Porfirio Diaz, Mexico has long
tradition of authoritarian rule. President currently still
holds a great deal of power.
• Populism – revolutions of 19th and 20th century had
significant peasant base led by charismatic leaders that
called for more rights for ordinary Mexicans, particularly
indigenous citizens. Zapatista movement is reflection of
this tradition
Historical Traditions continued
• Power Plays/Divisions within Elite – elites
who led dissenters during 1810 & 1910 revolutions;
warlords & caudillos of the early 20th century; and the
politicos & tecnicos of the late 20th century
• Instability and Legitimacy Issues – Mexico’s
political history full of chaos, conflict, bloodshed, and
violent resolution to political differences. Even though
most Mexicans believe the government is legitimate, the
current regime still leans toward instability
III. Political Culture
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National Identity – Mexicans share a strong
sense of national identification based on
common history, dominant religion and
language
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Importance of religion (Catholicism)
Patron-clientelism (“You scratch my back, I’ll
scratch yours”)
Economic dependency
IV. Geographic Influence
• Mountains & Deserts – make communication
and transportation difficult; promotes regionalism;
limits areas where productive agriculture is possible
• Varied Climates – cold, dry mountains to tropical
rain forests because of Mexico’s varying terrain and long
expanse from North to South
• Natural Resources – petroleum, silver, copper,
gold, lead, zinc, natural gas, timber
• U.S.-Mexican Border – 2,000 mile long border
means relationships are inevitable (migration,
dependency, conflict)
V. Population
• Over 100 million people in Mexico
 60% Mestizo
 30% Amerindian (Indigenous)
 10% other (European, Asian, etc.)
• Most populated Spanish-speaking country in the world
• 75% of Mexico’s population live in urban areas (Mexico
City’s population is 18 million)
• Population in northern part of Mexico more prosperous
than central & southern Mexico. Farther south you go
the greater the poverty of the people.
Population continued
• Rural farmers: Indians, poorest and most
exploited
• Poor urban: unskilled workers
• Growing working class
• Middle class that has grown since WWII
• Upper-middle class that wields a lot of political
power
• Tiny rural, landowning class holds rest of
political power
VI. Colonial Era (colonialism)
• Cultural Heterogeneity – Spanish took control over
numerous indigenous populations dominated by the Aztecs once
they conquered Tenochtitlan
 Mestizo – ethnic mixture of two peoples (European &
indigenous)
• Catholicism – most Spaniards settled in or near Mexico city,
but Spanish priests settled throughout Mexico’s hinterland
converting the population to Christianity. Priests developed strong
relationships with the people of Mexico
• Economic Dependency – all trade done with Spain
• Spanish Hierarchy – elaborate political & social status
hierarchy structure
VII. Independence: “MEXICO”
• Instability & Legitimacy Issues – Spanish left and took
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hierarchy structure with them, reorganizing government was
difficult task, Mexico had 36 presidents from 1833-1855
Rise of Military – Instability led to military control, ex. Santa
Anna
U.S. Domination – US challenges Mexican land claims,
Mexican-American War (1846-1848), Treaty of Guadelupe Hidalgo
(US gets TX, NM, CA, AZ, UT, part of CO)
Liberals vs. Conservatives – Constitution of 1857 based
on democratic principles. Liberal president Benito Juarez
“liberalizes” Mexico. Conservatism reflected in joint French,
Spanish, and English takeover of Mexico under Maximilian (18641867). After Maximilian’s execution Juarez brought back to power
but liberal/conservative struggle would continue
“The Porfiriato”
• Porfirio Diaz
 Military general under Benito Juarez
 Staged military coup in 1876
 Instituted himself as president of Mexico, promised
he would serve no more than one term
 Ruled Mexico for 34 years with an iron hand
 Cientificos – young, educated advisors of Diaz that
believed in bringing scientific and economic
progress to Mexico
Influences of Porfiriato
• Stability – Diaz dictatorship ended years of conflict
and chaos
• Authoritarianism – no sharing of political power
beyond small, closed elite group
• Foreign Investment/Economic Growth –
cientificos encouraged entrepreneurship and foreign
investment, primarily from the U.S., resulted in growth
of business and industry
• Growing Gap between Rich & Poor – as a result of
development and industrialization
VIII. 20th Century
• Porfirio Diaz ousted in coup by other elites
dissatisfied with Diaz’ rule and sensitive to the greed
of the Porfirians
• Diaz abdicates to General Francisco Madero, a
landowner from Coahuila
• Revolution of 1910 begins and warlordism (Zapata
and peasants; Pancho Villa and unemployed
workers and small farms) chaos would persist in
Mexico until 1934
• Caudillos or regional strongmen sought to increase
their personal wealth and social status
Influences of the Mexican Revolution
• Patron-client System
• Constitution of 1917-established principle of
state control over all natural resources,
subordination of church to state, government
redistrbutes land and labor rights
• Establishment of the PRI
Mexican Revolution continued
• Patron-Client System – in an effort to unseat
Diaz, caudillos rose to challenge each other for power.
Popular leaders Pancho Villa & Emiliano Zapata
emerged leading peasant armies. Around each leader a
patron-client system emerged that involved large
numbers of citizens
 Many caudillos were ultimately assassinated
(including Villa and Zapata)
 Large numbers of followers were also killed in
the competing world of the caudillos
Patron-Client system
• Camarillas: everyone knows the system even the
peasants
• This is clientalism which works with corporatism
▫ Starts with an assumption of community, not
individual
▫ People are members of a group that make up society
▫ If led wisely, the system works
▫ Led wrongly, and corruption sets in
 Patrons maintain loyalty by offering rewards, and clients
repay that debt at the voting booth
Constitution of 1917
• Ended the Revolution
 Violence & Political Assassinations continued
• Mexican constitution very long and easily
amended
• Set up structure for Democratic Government
(Political Institutions resemble those of the U.S.)
 Three branches of Government
 Competitive Elections
 Most public officials directly elected by the people
Conflict with Church after Revolution
• Cristeros Rebellion (1920)
 Hundreds of Thousands Killed (Priests murdered)
• Liberals legally separate Church & State, viewed
church as a bastion of conservatism
 Forbid priests from voting
 Placed federal restrictions on church-affiliated
schools (parochial schools)
 Suspended religious services
• Priests continue to lead rebellions after Liberal
changes, contributes to chaos of 20th century
Establishment of PRI
• After years of conflict, President Calles brings caudillos
together for agreement in 1929
• Attempts to bring all caudillos under one big, umbrella
political party
 Bring stability through the idea of “passing around”
power from one leader to the next as presidency
changed hands
 Sexenios – president could only serve one 6-year term
 Other leaders would be given major positions in
government to establish their influence
 PRI- “institutionalized” the revolution by stabilizing
conflict between leaders
IX. Cardenas Upheaval (1934-1940)
• Succeeded Calles’ as president
• Stabilized and Radicalized Mexican politics
• Gave voice to peasant demands from the
Revolution of 1910
• Charismatic leader
• “the Roosevelt of Mexico” as labeled by
American scholars
Cardenas’ Changes
• Redistribution of Land – land taken away from big landlords,
foreigners and redistributed as ejidos – collective land grants – to be
worked by peasants
• Nationalization of Industry – foreign business owners
kicked out of country, most industry put under control of the state. Ex:
PEMEX – giant, government controlled oil company
• Investment in Public Works – government builds roads,
provides electricity, creates public services to modernize Mexico
• Encouragement of Peasant & Union
Organizations – Cardenas welcomes their input in government,
they form their own camarillas with leaders that represent their interests on
presidents’ cabinet
• Concentration of Power in Presidency – Cardenas
stabilizes presidency, when his sexenio was up he peacefully let go of power
Cardenas and ISI
• Cardenas’ strategy of state-led development
known as Import Substitution
Industrialization (ISI)
• ISI
 Employs high tariffs to protect locally produced goods
from foreign competition
 Government ownership of key industries
 Government subsidies to domestic industries
 Government takes lead in promoting industrialization
(very little capital in private hands during this era)
X. Tecnicos & the Pendulum Theory
• Miguel Aleman becomes president in 1946
 Encouraged entrepreneurship
 Foreign investment
 Free-market strategies on exports
• Followed by president who returned to Cardenas-style
reform
• Pendulum Theory – back-and-forth effect in
Mexican politics from socialist reform to free-market
economic development and back again.
• By the 1970s the pendulum appeared to stop with the
emergence of the tecnicos
Tecnicos continued
• Tecnicos – educated, business-oriented leaders
usually with degrees in economics, political
science, business, etc.
• Tecnicos in the PRI espouse the free-market
approach to politics
• By the 1980s Mexico had settled into an
economic approach based upon Neoliberalism
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Free markets
Balanced budgets
Privatization
Free trade
Limited government intervention in the economy
“Tecnicos & Politicos”
• By 1950s Mexico welcomed foreign investment
• GNP experienced spectacular growth until the 1980s
• This “Mexican Miracle” based largely on huge
supplies of natural gas & oil
• Mexico became a model for LDC’s everywhere
• “Oil Bust” of the early 1980s, plummeting price of oil
sunk the Mexican economy and inflated the value of the
peso
• This caused added political tension within the PRI
• Division between the “politicos” – old style caciques
who headed camarillas – and the “tecnicos” began to
grow wider
XI. Citizens, Society, & the State
• Traditionally Mexican citizens have interacted with government
through patron-client system
• Because camarillas so interwoven in Mexican politics, most people
have had some contact with government during their lives
• Clientelism has generally meant that the government had the upper
hand through its ability to determine which interests to respond to
and which to ignore
• Role of citizens in Mexico is changing as political parties have
become competitive and democracy becomes more firmly
entrenched
XII. Cleavages
• Urban vs. Rural – Mexico’s political structure put into place
in early 20th century when most of population was rural. PRI and patronclient system were intended to control large numbers of illiterate peasants
in exchange for small favors from politicos. Today Mexico is 75% urban,
with a literacy rate of about 90%. Urban voters less likely to support PRI,
more receptive to political and economic reform
• Mestizo vs. Amerindian – only about 10% of Mexicans
speak indigenous languages, but about 30% consider themselves
Amerindians. Amerindians marginalized, predominantly rural, and poor.
This cleavage tends to define social class, with most of Mexico’s wealth in
the hands of the mestizo population.
• North vs. South – north almost like a different country then
the area south of Mexico City. Majority of educated citizens and Mexico’s
wealth lies in the north. Southern Mexico primarily populated by
Amerindians, characterized and led by Zapatista Movement in Chiapas.
“Ya Basta” Zapatista
Movement Lives On
(EZLN)
• EZLN – began in 1994 in Chiapas in protest of the signing of the NAFTA
treaty
• Viewed agreement as a continued exploitation of landowners and PRI
bosses
• EZLN captured four towns demanding jobs, land, housing, food, health,
education, independence, freedom, democracy, justice and peace
• Rebellion originally based on ethnicity – Amerindian – but spread to
other factions of society
• Zapatista supporters were black ski masks to hide their identity from the
government
• Although a moderate truce was announced with the government, the Fox
administration was unable to negotiate a settlement to the dispute with
the Zapatistas despite numerous efforts to do so
• Zapatistas represent the stance against all that is still wrong with
Mexican politics
Other challenges
• Urbanization and a new middle class
• Economic crises: heavy deficit spending
• Globalization: requires more transparency to Mexican
politics
• Privitization: could create more independent elites
• Communications technology: allows Mexicans to see
world standards and how achieve those goals
• Narco politics
Fox’s Legacy
• Pluralism
• Decentralization
• Electoral Reform
• Rule of Law
• Anti-Narcotics Policy