<div dir="ltr">
<div id="gmail-toolbar" class="gmail-toolbar-container">
</div><div class="gmail-container" dir="ltr">
<div class="gmail-header gmail-reader-header gmail-reader-show-element">
<font size="1"><a href="https://www.resumen-english.org/2020/10/bolivia-oas-prepares-electoral-fraud/">https://www.resumen-english.org/2020/10/bolivia-oas-prepares-electoral-fraud/</a>
</font>
<h1 class="gmail-reader-title">Bolivia: OAS Prepares Electoral Fraud</h1></div><div class="gmail-content"><div class="gmail-moz-reader-content gmail-reader-show-element"><div id="gmail-readability-page-1" class="gmail-page"><div id="gmail-wrapper2">By Ángel Guerra Cabrera on October 8, 2020
<div id="gmail-container"><div id="gmail-left-div"><div id="gmail-left-inside"><div><p><a href="https://i1.wp.com/www.resumen-english.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/10-9-bolivia.jpg?ssl=1"><img src="https://i1.wp.com/www.resumen-english.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/10-9-bolivia.jpg?fit=500%2C282&ssl=1" alt="" style="margin-right: 0px;" width="452" height="255"></a>The
United States and the Bolivian oligarchy are very much afraid of the
return of the Movement to Socialism (MAS) to government in the October
18 elections, ten days from now. <span id="gmail-more-14823"></span>After the
enormous effort they made to overthrow it last year, they can be
expected to make desperate attempts to prevent its electoral victory.
There are plenty of signs of that. Recently, the self-proclaimed Jeanine
Áñez categorically stated that “authoritarian populism,” as
popularly-rooted leaders like Evo Morales are called, would not return
to Bolivia. It is true that her dictatorship is crumbling and is the
object of the greatest popular repudiation, but this statement suggests
coup plans by the oligarchy.</p>
<p>The fraud against the MAS is one of the big threats to the Bolivian
election of October 18, with the aim of preventing its almost certain
victory in the first round. Another threat is that in the days that
remain, legal action will be taken against the standard-bearer for the
presidency of MAS, Luis Arce, the successful Minister of Economy in the
government of Evo Morales. Arce is running with the indigenous leader
David Choquehuanca, ex-chancellor of that administration, as his
vice-presidential candidate. Both appear to be winning the election in
the first round in various polls with more than 40 points. If this
happens, it would prevent the only possibility that the right-wing
apparently has of winning the election: the union of all the forces of
that group in an eventual second round against the MAS. In Bolivia, the
candidate who achieves a vote of 40 percentage points, or exceeds by 10
points the one that follows, wins in the first round.</p>
<p>The siege and harassment that fascist youth organizations have been
maintaining for weeks against the headquarters of the Attorney General’s
Office (FG) in Sucre, the country’s administrative capital, is aimed,
according to its participants, at “removing” the head of that body, Juan
Lanchipa, from office. For the vandals, Lanchipa would be the obstacle
for criminal proceedings against MAS leaders, in another chapter of the
judicialization of politics, used by the regional right-wing to prevent
the victory of leftist candidates, to limit their activity or to depose
them. The self-styled Cochala Youth Resistance and Chuquisaca
Resistance, organizations that emerged with the right-wing protests
against Evo Morales, before and after the October elections last year,
are the ones conducting the intimidation campaign</p>
<p>against the FG, which intensified on October 6 with insulting
graffiti on the building of the entity, attacks on urban property and
the hurling of firecrackers, carried out under the “permissiveness ” of
the police, as the Ombudsman’s Office charged. These organizations are
led by the Civic Committees, extreme right-wing separatist groups and
the main protagonists of the failed coup attempt against Evo in 2008.</p>
<p>Last week, the government minister, Arturo Murillo, a strongman of
the dictatorship, paid an unexpected visit to Washington. There he met
with Luis Almagro, Secretary-General of the OAS, who later expressed his
concern about the threat of fraud (votes in favor of MAS) that Murillo
spoke to him about. Why are these two little sweethearts now starting to
talk about fraud when they are the ones who control the Superior
Electoral Court and the OAS Electoral Observation Mission? No wonder
Arce, the Masista candidate, commented: “Hopefully they are not
receiving instructions not to carry out the elections or finally, as
happened in Honduras, to commit electoral fraud”.</p>
<p>It was Almagro and the OAS who, with their false report on electoral
fraud, opened the door to the military coup that forced Evo to leave the
country. That report has been strongly refuted by Mark Weisbrost,
co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in
Washington, supported by 132 economists and statisticians who called on
the OAS to “retract its misleading statements about the elections” of
October last year. As a result of this report, several US legislators
and Luz Elena Baños, Mexico’s representative to the OAS, have asked the
agency to explain their fake report, to which they have not responded
and which they have no legitimate basis to answer. A recent poll by the
Latin American Strategic Center for Geopolitics places Arce in the lead
with 44 percent of the vote and gives neoliberal and repressive Carlos
Mesa 34. In third place is far-right-wing Eastern leader Fernando
Camacho with 12 percent. Polls reveal many undecided voters.</p>
<p>A probable path that the Bolivian dictatorship could try, with the
support of the OAS, the United States and the world media, is by means
of “adjustments” to the electoral result, to prevent the victory of Luis
Arce in the first round. If so, they should give it some thought. The
Bolivian masses, who in past decades overthrew several neoliberal
governments, are not going to meekly fold their hands if they try to
steal the election from them.</p>
<p>Source: <a href="https://www.alainet.org/es/articulo/209250">America Latina en Movimiento</a>, translation Internationalist 360</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div></div></div>
</div>
<div>
</div>
</div>
</div>