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Judi Lynn

(160,524 posts)
Fri Sep 25, 2015, 12:09 AM Sep 2015

Is Argentina’s Presidential Frontrunner the Next Hero of Latin America’s Left?

Is Argentina’s Presidential Frontrunner the Next Hero of Latin America’s Left?

By Richard G. Miles
September 21, 2015 - 1:09 pm



aniel Scioli, who won the most votes on Aug. 10 in the first round of Argentina’s presidential primaries, is the apparent favorite of Latin America’s left-wing leaders to succeed President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. The day after Scioli’s initial victory, at an executive session in Caracas of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America – Peoples’ Trade Agreement (ALBA-TCP) — the left’s answer to free trade in the Americas — Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro praised Scioli’s initial victory as a continuation of the Kirchners’ legacy. Rafael Correa, president of Ecuador, lauded the primary results as evidence that “Kirchnerismo will win again.” In a July visit to Cuba, Scioli was warmly received by Raúl Castro, who he praised for his “positive influence.” Former Brazilian President Lula da Silva, returning to campaign mode, said he was “pumped for Scioli to win the elections.” Most recently, Scioli (currently the governor of Buenos Aires province) rolled out the red carpet for a one-day visit to the capital by President Evo Morales of Bolivia. Scioli’s Facebook page featured the two attending campaign style events and the two — with more enthusiasm than style — playing soccer together.

What do these leaders see in Scioli? Is the former vice president, as they imagine, a third Kirchner, willing to continue statist policies and an increasingly hostile attitude towards a free press? Or, is he a kinder, gentler Peronist, as the international press would like to believe? Reuters has called him “moderate” and the The Economist and The Guardian have tagged him as a “centrist.” Does Scioli want a replay of 12 years of Kirchner confrontation or does he seek to improve Argentina’s image among international investors and creditors?

The problem is, no one really knows. Scioli, is still viewed as a cipher by many Argentines, a man who will try to please everyone. Over the years the former speedboat champion (who lost an arm during a 1990 race) has cultivated a daring, playboy charm, despite his middle class origins. Scioli’s grandfather owned a hardware store that his father expanded into an appliance store. The business went bankrupt in 1995. When Scioli’s brother José was kidnapped by left-wing guerillas in 1977, Daniel, only 18-years old, negotiated his brother’s ransom and release. He has been married on and off and on again to a former model, and in 1990 was forced to legally recognize an out-of-wedlock daughter — now 38 years old — who now accompanies her father to events and has been dubbed “the princess of Buenos Aires.”

Scioli has a hard time choosing who he wants to be and how he wants to be seen. He built an indoor soccer facility in Buenos Aires that prominently displays wax figures of “world leaders” including Che Guevara and Winston Churchill; a pairing unlikely to occur to most people. In 2014 he said he wanted to “normalize our relationship with international markets,” but last June he called Argentina’s creditors “vulture funds.” After his primary victory, he said, “We will go out to the world and look for investment. ” But then he picked as his running mate Carlos Zannini, who as Cristina’s legal secretary engineered the 2012 forced take over of YPF, a Spanish owned oil company. Three days before playing footsie with Evo Morales, Scioli visited a Dow Chemical plant in Bahía Blanca accompanied by U.S. Ambassador Noah Mamet. “Dow’s continued investment,” he said, “is very important to us.”

More:
http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/09/21/is-argentinas-presidential-frontrunner-the-next-hero-of-latin-americas-left/

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Is Argentina’s Presidential Frontrunner the Next Hero of Latin America’s Left? (Original Post) Judi Lynn Sep 2015 OP
"Foreign Policy" is the CIA/MIC view. Peace Patriot Sep 2015 #1
It's amazing how much control the people you mention have over what is being published. Judi Lynn Sep 2015 #2

Peace Patriot

(24,010 posts)
1. "Foreign Policy" is the CIA/MIC view.
Fri Sep 25, 2015, 03:23 AM
Sep 2015

Their articles are sometimes instructive for that very reason--hot off the fax machine from Langley. (I guess "fax machine" dates me a bit; today, hot off the top secret email server?). Anyway, they say they can't figure Scioli out (leftist one day, corporatist the next, etc.), and maybe that reflects a wise strategy by Scioli (the longer he can keep them guessing, the less time they have to devise dirty tricks and other projects to defeat him), or maybe they're just pretending that they can't figure him out. I suspect the latter. The main purpose of the article may not be to discuss Scioli but rather to "frame" the discussion about Argentina.

For instance, they ask this question: "Does Scioli want a replay of 12 years of Kirchner confrontation or does he seek to improve Argentina’s image among international investors and creditors?"

They want you to think that "12 years of Kirchner confrontation" has been a bad thing. But this is absolutely wrong. It took 12 years of extremely brave and intelligent leadership, first by the late Nestor Kirchner, and more recently by his wife Cristina Fernandez (who was elected in her own right after Nestor died), to restore Argentina as a viable country. It had been destroyed by the IMF/World Bank. Now that it's back on its feet, it is of interest to "investors and creditors."

We see how important "framing" is. Their question pits the years of "confrontation" against investor/creditor interest, as if they were opposites. But those "confrontations" (strong presidential actions, a la FDR in the Great Depression) were VITAL to Argentina's very survival as a society, and to its long road to recovery from the banksters' looting.

In any case, I'll take his endorsers--Lula da Silva, Rafael Correa and Evo Morales--as pretty good evidence that Scioli is a solid progressive, and also a solid defender of the sovereignty of Latin American countries, and a strong compadre in the now big South American leftist coalition that was started by Nestor Kirchner and Hugo Chavez.


Judi Lynn

(160,524 posts)
2. It's amazing how much control the people you mention have over what is being published.
Fri Sep 25, 2015, 05:40 AM
Sep 2015

When I started reading this article, I had to stop and look again to see who the heck was publishing this stuff. It was amazing.

It seemed it was good to post it, anyway, as it did allow some small snippets of information to get through which were worth-while, and it's really good to know Brazil's former President has come forward to endorse this man, along with Rafael Correa.

It seems that the MIC people are bearing down even harder right now, today's stories were mind-boggling. So many of them seem to refer to Latin America ONLY from economic perspectives, as if that is the most exalted, the only perspective which really matters. It seems completely unnatural. Freakish. Monstrous.

It was excellent reading your views on how this information was handled, or manhandled in the article. I surely hope there will be enough other thoughtful, intelligent people who are reading closely enough to be aware of what these powers behind the appearance have been doing.

In time they will bring their own downfall. They have been working against the human race. Hope it's during our lifetimes.

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