
March for Hope: June 9, 2012. Photo: Aeneas De Troya.
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March for Hope: June 9, 2012. Photo: Aeneas De Troya.
By W. T. Whitney – Dec 1, 2022
âSometimes there are revolutions but people keep on thinking the same way. But now we are seeing a peacetime transformation process and there is a change of mentality ⊠I said yesterday that we are winning the battle against racism, classism, discrimination. This is not about material things, not about welfare programs. Thereâs been a change of mentalityâ.
Mexican President AndrĂ©s Manuel LĂłpez Obrador (AMLO) was commenting on events of November 27, which was the fourth anniversary of his taking office. AMLO and his Moreno Party administration had staged a march and then a rally in the ZĂłcalo plaza in Mexico City. They sought to demonstrate the Mexican peopleâs support for what AMLO calls Mexicoâs Fourth Transformation.
Supporters gathered at the Angel of Independence Monument and walked three miles along Reforma Avenue to arrive at the ZĂłcalo. The crowd was such that the walk, with AMLO walking too, lasted five hours. And, âNot even a window was broken,â according to Claudia Sheinbaum, who heads Mexico Cityâs government.
AMLO spoke before 1.2 million people. He highlighted what he regarded as outstanding achievements of his government and promised that work would be continuing âunder the premise of attending first to the poorest and most vulnerable people.â He attached the name âMexican humanismâ to his governmentâs âsocio-political model.â Noting the high representation of youth in the crowd, AMLO proclaimed a âgenerational change.â
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In his remarks, AMLO catalogued achievements in providing for peopleâs needs. A report from La Jornada news service is the basis for the following summary.
Security is improvising, he indicated. His government âon a daily basis has to confront the scourge of violence; corruption and impunity are not tolerated. Crimes that fall within federal jurisdiction are down 27.3%.
AMLO listed social advances in various areas:
* 35 million families, 85% of the total, directly receive âat least a little portion of the national budget,â and the others benefit from reduced taxes and reduced costs for essentials.
* The minimum salary has more than doubled, âsomething never seen in the last 40 yearsâ â and will be increasing more in the coming year.
* Labor reforms include secret voting in union elections, elimination of subcontracting, and a doubling of profit-sharing arrangements.
* Almost 28 million new workers are enrolled in social security, and the salaries of workers has reached âhistoricallyâ high levels. There are 1.3 million new government jobs.
* Now 283,535 single mothers working outside of the home receive 800 pesos each month; 3.7 million families with children in elementary schools receive 1,680 pesos every two months; and 4.2 million upper-level students receive the same amount. Some 410,000 university students from poor families receive 2,450 pesos monthly, 128,950 postgraduate students and researchers receive scholarships.
AMLO emphasized the construction by his government of 145 free public universities where 1,168 professors are teaching and 45,581 young people studying. The aim is to establish 200 such institutions within the so-called âBenito JuĂĄrez Systemâ which, according to a government website, is âdedicated to young people excluded by economic reasonsâ and those whose geographic access to higher education is limited.
The president mentioned that funds are available that enable parents of school children to maintain and rehabilitate 113,971 school buildings. Teachersâ salaries are up 21%, and schools now provide a âlabor baseâ for 650,000 education workers. He noted that his governmentâs ârelation with teachers is one of respect and gratitude ⊠There have been no strikes or work stoppages in the public schools.â
AMLO emphasized that IMSS-Bienestar, the federal healthcare system, has extended into new regions where medical generalists and specialists are for the most part working âtwo shiftsâ every day. He is âcommitted to extending the IMSS-Bienestar system throughout the country to make peopleâs right to healthcare a reality.â
According to its website, âThe IMSS-BIENESTAR Program provides first and second level health care services in its health units. The latter covers the specialties of gynecology-obstetrics, general surgery, internal medicine and pediatrics.â With â43 years of experience,â the program âcombines medical care with health promotion actions in the community.â Care is provided gratis to patients without social security benefits.
Mexicoâs social security system has expanded; 300,000 handicapped people, mostly children, are receiving more generous pensions and 10.5 million seniors now receive 2,800 pesos bimonthly, with more on the way after January 1, 2023. In a program called âYoung People Building the Future,â 2.4 million young people are apprenticing in preparation for future work. The minimum wage they receive is a social security benefit.
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AMLOâs reference to a âFourth Transformationâ raises the question of what about the first three transformations. These were three periods of significant change, specifically: independence from Spain 1810-1821; reforms, mainly separation of church and state, undertaken by President Benito JuĂĄrez in 1858-1861; and Mexicoâs Revolution in 1910-1917 that accounts for the present Constitution.
The march and mass gathering of Moreno and AMLO supporters annoyed individuals such as Sandra Cuevas, the mayor of CuauhtĂ©moc. She denounced a âmarch of hate, division, inequality and corruptionâ while claiming that government officials at all levels and beneficiaries of social programs had been forced to participate.
One observer writes that for Morena to be âwinning the streetsâ doesnât detract from the advantage conservative political parties enjoy with an overwhelming presence on social media and on newspaper front pages. Their power there, and in their organizations and the judiciary, enables them to âhinder, obstruct, and sabotageâ Morenaâs work of governing. In any case, opinion polls are pointing to a large Morena Party victory in the elections of 2024.
W.T. Whitney Jr. grew up on a dairy farm in Vermont and now lives in rural Maine. He practiced and taught pediatrics for 35 years and long ago joined the Cuba solidarity movement, working with Let Cuba Live of Maine, Pastors for Peace, and the Venceremos Brigade. He writes on Latin America and health issues for the People's World.