Showing posts with label PRD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PRD. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Mexico nears electoral reform, and an energy bill

Nov 12, 2013, 7:02 PM EST
Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto (R) speaks during the opening of Nissan's new plant in Aguascalientes, Mexico November 12, 2013.
REUTERS/Henry Romero
By Dave Graham
blouinnews.com


MEXICO CITY, Nov 12 (Reuters) - Accused a generation ago of engineering the "perfect dictatorship," Mexico's ruling party is now close to agreeing on a plan that could weaken the presidency and strengthen Congress in order to win votes for a major energy reform.

The Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and its opposition rivals are shortly expected to unveil the blueprint for a reform aimed at giving Congress greater oversight of government and allowing lawmakers to serve consecutive terms.

Billed as a step forward for democracy, the electoral reform is a bargaining chip for President Enrique Pena Nieto's most ambitious plan - changing the constitution to allow more private capital into the state-controlled oil industry.

The energy bill is the central pivot of a broader drive for change from telecoms to education that Pena Nieto hopes will help boost Mexico's economic growth, which has long lagged that of other countries in the region.

Pena Nieto needs two-thirds of the votes in Congress to change the constitution. But the PRI does not even have a majority, making it dependent on help from an opposition keen to cut back the party's long-standing domination of Mexican politics.

Some of the votes needed for the oil reform are likely to come from the conservative National Action Party (PAN) - which has made them conditional on electoral reform passing first.

That is close to becoming reality.

"We've come almost 100 percent of the way," Jose Maria Martinez, PAN deputy leader in the Senate, told Reuters, adding that he expected a preliminary deal on electoral reform this week.

Senior politicians in the PRI, PAN and the leftist Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) say they see eye-to-eye on most of the reform and PRI Senate leader Emilio Gamboa told local radio that a bill could be voted on next week.

If approved, it would then go to the lower house, improving the chances of a deal on the energy reform this year.

Political sparring over how much to open up the oil industry, which the left is resisting, has raised doubts about whether Congress can approve an energy reform this year.

Still, Martinez of the PAN said talks on the energy bill had advanced significantly in recent weeks, and Interior Minister Miguel Angel Osorio Chong told Mexican radio on Tuesday he saw "the will" in Congress to pass it this year.

DIRECT RE-ELECTION

The electoral reform seems unlikely to bring about a major change sought by the PAN - a direct run-off between the first and second placed candidates in presidential elections.

"That isn't on the agenda for the PRI at least," said Enrique Burgos, a PRI senator who chairs the committee responsible for constitutional matters in the upper chamber.

What it is certain to contain are changes to reverse a ban on consecutive re-election of legislators in Congress - rules peculiar only to Mexico and Costa Rica in Latin America.

Senators would have the option of serving two consecutive six-year terms, while lower house members would be allowed to sit in Congress for up to three or four three-year stints in total, according to legislators involved in the talks.

At present, legislators can only stay in Congress by hopping between houses for a maximum of 9 to 12 years.

None of the current members of Congress will be eligible for re-election under the new rules, the parties say.
The reform foresees changing the constitution to allow states to decide whether to permit direct re-election of mayors and deputies in the state legislatures, Burgos said.

But it should also do away with the "the omnipotent president" created by the PRI, said Jesus Ortega, an ex-chairman of the PRD and one of his party's chief negotiators.

Changing the electoral law has been a perennial objective of opposition parties looking to erode the power base the PRI has maintained since the party's founders consolidated the political system established after the Mexican Revolution.

So successfully did the PRI hold onto the reins of power from 1929 that Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa in 1990 famously called Mexico the "perfect dictatorship."

After ruling Mexico for 71 years straight, the PRI had become a byword with corruption, authoritarianism and economic crises. In 2000, the PAN won its first presidential election.

At local and state level, however, the PRI remained the dominant force in Mexican politics, and the PAN were never able to secure an outright majority in Congress.

Legislative deadlock and a rising death toll from the PAN government's struggle against drug gangs opened the door for a PRI return in 2012 - but the party was not the dominant force of old when Pena Nieto won last July's election.

For the first time, the PRI failed to secure a majority in either house of Congress when it won the presidency.
To avoid stasis, Pena Nieto made a pact with PAN and PRD leaders. In exchange for their help on efforts to modernize the economy, he would grant them concessions like electoral reform.

However, Congress is still divided. No party has held a majority since the PRI lost control in mid-term elections in 1997.

Lawmakers say the electoral reform is likely to contain rules for formal coalitions among the main parties - if and when the president chooses to form such governments.

"We're also going to mandate that the Senate approves the national development plan and the security strategy," said Martinez, the PAN's deputy leader in the Senate.

The reform also aims to create a more powerful national electoral body - but that has met resistance from states governed by the PRI unwilling to give up the control they have over the outcome of tight elections, said Ortega of the PRD.

Mexico nears electoral reform, eyes energy bill

Thursday, 14 November 2013 00:10
BY DAVE GRAHAM
Reuters


MEXICO CITY – Accused a generation ago of engineering the “perfect dictatorship,” Mexico’s ruling party is now close to agreeing on a plan that could weaken the presidency and strengthen Congress in order to win votes for a major energy reform.

The Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and its opposition rivals are shortly expected to unveil the blueprint for a reform aimed at giving Congress greater oversight of government and allowing lawmakers to serve consecutive terms.

Billed as a step forward for democracy, the electoral reform is a bargaining chip for President Enrique Peña Nieto’s most ambitious plan — changing the constitution to allow more private capital into Pemex.

The energy bill is the central pivot of a broader drive for change from telecoms to education that Peña Nieto hopes will help boost Mexico’s economic growth, which has long lagged that of other countries in the region.

Peña Nieto needs two-thirds of the votes in Congress to change the constitution. But the PRI does not have a majority, making it dependent on help from an opposition keen to cut back the party’s long-standing domination of Mexican politics.

Some of the votes needed for the oil reform are likely to come from the National Action Party (PAN) — which has made them conditional on electoral reform passing first.

That is close to becoming reality.

Senior politicians in the PRI, PAN and the leftist Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) say they see eye-to-eye on most of the reform and PRI Senate leader Emilio Gamboa told local radio that a bill could be voted on next week.

If approved, it would then go to the lower house, improving the chances of a deal on the energy reform this year.

Political sparring over how much to open up the oil industry, which the left is resisting, has raised doubts about whether Congress can approve an energy reform this year.

Still, Martínez of the PAN said talks on the energy bill had advanced significantly in recent weeks, and Interior Minister Miguel Ángel Osorio Chong told Mexican radio on Tuesday he saw “the will” in Congress to pass it this year.

The electoral reform seems unlikely to bring about a major change sought by the PAN — a direct run-off between the first and second placed candidates in presidential elections.

“That isn’t on the agenda for the PRI at least,” said Enrique Burgos, a PRI senator who chairs the committee responsible for constitutional matters in the upper chamber.

What it is certain to contain are changes to reverse a ban on consecutive re-election of legislators in Congress — rules peculiar only to Mexico and Costa Rica in Latin America.

Senators would have the option of serving two consecutive six-year terms, while lower house members would be allowed to sit in Congress for up to three or four three-year stints in total, according to legislators involved in the talks. At present, legislators can only stay in Congress by hopping between houses for a maximum of 9 to 12 years.

The reform foresees changing the constitution to allow states to decide whether to permit direct re-election of mayors and deputies in the state legislatures, Burgos said.

But it should also do away with the “the omnipotent president” created by the PRI, said Jesús Ortega, an ex-chairman of the PRD and one of his party’s chief negotiators.

Changing the electoral law has been a perennial objective of opposition parties looking to erode the power base the PRI has maintained since the party’s founders consolidated the political system established after the Mexican Revolution.

The reform also aims to create a more powerful national electoral body — but that has met resistance from states governed by the PRI unwilling to give up the control they have over the outcome of tight elections, said Ortega of the PRD.

“I call it the resistance of the barons,” he said.


Wednesday, October 16, 2013

PRI, PRD agree on economic deal

Wednesday, 16 October 2013
BY ELIZABETH ALBARRÁN
AND ELIZABETH MARTÍNEZ
The News


Legislators in the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and the opposition Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) announced an agreement Tuesday to approve an economic package that includes a revenue law, the 2014 federal budget and several modifications to President Enrique Peña Nieto’s tax reform proposal.

Mexico City is set to receive federal funding for infrastructure development on par with state governments for the first time.

Mexico City will also receive resources from the Social Infrastructure Support Fund (FAIS) for the first time, though the amount must still be specified by the Chamber of Deputies.

Mexico City Mayor Miguel Ángel Mancera said this is a historic announcement, as his party, the PRD, has been calling for its inclusion in the program for years. He said the money would be used to improve the city’s subway system.

The modifications establish that Peña Nieto’s proposed universal pension would not affect already-existing pension plans established by state governments.

Under the new proposal, all 31 states and Mexico City would be allowed access to a fund that would rebate taxes paid directly to the federal government. This would apply only to taxes that are currently paid to state governments.

At the request of the Green Party (PVEM), it was also agreed to not apply a Value Added Tax (VAT) to soccer matches and bullfights.