Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Commie Pinko

The opposition FMLN (Communist) has a center-left candidate in Mauricio Funes, whose broad appeal has given him a lead of up to 20 percent in the polls. Still, his victory is by no means secure. A Salvadoran who went home for the first time in a decade in order to vote in the January round of municipal and legislative elections told me, "People say only one bullet can stop Funes from winning."

Funes, 49, is a former political journalist at CNN whose mentors included two of those six slaughtered Jesuits.
Another influence Funes cites in interviews is his older brother, Roberto, a student leader who was kidnapped and killed in 1980, at the start of the war. It is widely noted that Funes is the first FMLN (FMLN is communist guerrilla terrorist organization) candidate for president never to have been an armed combatant. As a journalist he drew a large and committed television and radio audience because of his ability to appeal, in that polarized society, across the traditional divides.

What this means is that, just as people around the world monitored America's historic presidential election results, many will be watching next Sunday's vote in El Salvador with a similar mixture of hope and apprehension.

In the last Salvadoran presidential election five years ago, the Bush administration generated fear among the electorate with statements that an FMLN victory could affect the status of Salvadorans living in the United States. This was a powerful threat, since these temporary residents send back $3 billion in annual "remittances" that support 22 percent of Salvadoran families.

This time, there is hope for a different outcome. Letters have been written to President Obama by members of Congress urging him to pledge to work with whichever candidate wins the election rather than to seek to influence the vote. A similar letter to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton warns of a highly politicized atmosphere charged by partisan interests, and it contains a September 2008 report citing pre-election instances of increased violence, fraud, and media manipulation, observations endorsed by more than 200 concerned North American academics familiar with Central and Latin American politics. This effort was initiated by Victor Perla Jr., a Salvadoran-American professor of political science from the University of California at Santa Cruz, who told me in a recent phone conversation, "The point is that political campaigns based on slander, false information, and voter intimidation are a form of electoral fraud, because they limit a voter's ability to freely choose."

"Democracy vs. Authoritarianism" is the shorthand for Funes's promise to bring "the change that all of you have dreamed of," and at campaign rallies the broad coalition he has built is already demonstrating its strength in numbers. With the election of Obama providing pointed reminders of our own Civil War, we in this country have now been given an opportunity to reckon with the injustices of our own violent history. El Salvador's ongoing violence makes its need for reconciling voices more immediate, and Funes is offering a uniting voice on behalf of the people. With a signal from Washington, the United States could offer another: an overdue endorsement of the people's right to a real election.

Link (here)

3 comments:

Brian Dowling said...

I can't quite determine whether your denotation of Funes as a commie-pinko-candidate or FMLN as a communist guerrilla terrorist organization is serious or just misinformed.

Although the FMLN began with the leftist guerrilla organization in the Salvadoran civil war, you seem to ignore the fact that one's beginnings does not necessarily determine the legitimacy of the present.

I'd greatly appreciate a commentary that involves more than a red-lettered condemnation of men and parties based on politically charged epithets.

Joseph Fromm said...

Dear Brian,

On behalf of the 100 million people murdered by communist governments in the last century, including members of my own family. The term "Commie Pinko" is the most charitable thing I could come up with. I am glad I struck a cord with you, because maybe you will re examine your political idealism. FMLN is intrinsically evil organization. If it was not, than it would changed its name to reflect a new identity. The Leninist Red Star is still apart of its imagery and Funes stand proudly next to it!

Anonymous said...

you are really misinformed about FMLN as for many other things.

Write about things that you know.