Embattled Bariloche Mayor Omar Goye |
Verticality. Peronism was conceived as a vertical organization. If today it often looks like a monster with multiple talking heads (each of which thinks it’s right), that concept still holds at the most basic of levels. And even if, as a party, Peronist Justicialism appears to be an illustration of the old adage about how if you put 50 Argentines in a room together you’ll get 50 different points of view, as a movement, Peronism is all about the tail always following the head. At the top of the Peronist heap, it would appear that Goye is seen as having cut a path of his own, and on top of that, defied a virtual order from the President for him to tender his resignation.
Rampart in the Civic Center |
Roca and his mount placed in a kind of stall. |
A House Divided. At first glance the scene looked as if
it might be, like so many others before it, an installed protest against
municipal authorities, but if you read the signs, you began to ask yourself if
these were not groups led by the same “punteros
políticos” (heads of local pressure groups from the poorest neighborhoods)
with whom the mayor has so often been alleged to be conniving, since their
messages were clearly directed at the provincial government—which, at this
point in time, is unequivocally distancing itself from Goye and his
administration.
One sign read: “We ask for work and
you send us repression.” Another said, “Governor, you call us scabs, but we’re
workers.” A large banner in the middle read: “May Day Cooperative: Union and
Liberty, Work and Social Justice.” There was also a cryptic reference to the
looting’s having been directed against “multinationals”. But go tell that to
all of the mom and pop operations that were also victimized by the
well-organized hoards that descended on the city last December 21. Try as these
dubious activists might to make their “cause” sound noble, those incidents were
a case of political chicanery at the service of mass vandalism and larceny,
with no saving grace to justify them.
While such events may tend to confuse
and confound those who are not privy to the inner workings of the country’s political
underworld, the truth eventually percolates to the surface as the political
players scurry helter skelter following revolts of this sort, seeking to shed
responsibility and lay blame elsewhere while keeping their own political assets
intact. As usual—over the course of the last 70 years of Peronist history in
this country—what masquerades as “social upheaval for the cause of social
justice” is actually the result of infighting at the core of Peronism itself,
or “organized chaos” staged by one Peronist faction or another against whoever
happens to be in power at any given time. Cristina Kirchner appeared to suggest
this herself this past week when she referred to the December 21 riots as being
“a shabby version” (versión desmejorada)
of the organized mass looting and protests staged against the administrations
of former opposition Radical Party (UCR) Presidents Raúl Alfonsín (1983-1989)
and Fernando De la Rúa (1999-2001), which ended both of their presidencies ahead
of schedule. To her mind, there appears to be a single person accountable for
the mess: Omar Goye.
Río Negro Governor Alberto Weretilneck |
All About Money. It should come as no surprise to
anyone that the bad blood between the governor and the mayor is, apparently,
all about money. Weretilneck assumed the governorship a year ago, when his
predecessor, Carlos Soria, who won office with the backing of Cristina
Kirchner, was shot to death by his own wife on New Year’s Day, 2012, just 21
days after being sworn in. During a later tour of the province, Weretilneck
publicly announced in Bariloche that the province would be allocating 500
million pesos to the city to provide, among other things, for its ambitious social
programs. Goye later discovered that no such allocation was earmarked in the
provincial budget, and has since accused the governor of making facile
announcements for political gain and then welching on his promises. In the days
leading up to the organized looting in Bariloche, which spread like a contagion
to the rest of the country, Goye and his surrogates are reported to have repeatedly
warned the governor that by not coming up with the funds promised he was
risking a social explosion in one of Argentina’s premier tourist destinations.
The impression left by this is that in
what started as a bid by the mayor to pressure the governor into putting his
money where his mouth was, he may well have unleashed something he couldn’t
control (especially since he was conveniently out of town during the riots),
and something that grew a lot bigger than anybody would ever have expected.
Whatever the case might be, the person
on which the turn of events reflected worst wasn’t the provincial governor, but
the country’s president and her government, since the riots and looting spread
to ten of the country’s 23 provinces and the chaos triggered in Bariloche
fostered the impression of a country out of control, underscoring the growing perception
that Cristina Kirchner has lost the majority support that swept her into a
second term in office and that if she doesn’t start paying attention to the
demands of a no longer silent civil opposition, she might well expect to end up
like De la Rúa, whose ouster amounted to a civilian coup.
Sole Accountability. It would seem logical, then, that she
might like to see Mayor Goye’s head on a platter, and that was precisely what
she was calling for at the end of this week. She reportedly passed this “desire”
on to Weretilneck and to powerful Río Negro Senator Miguel Pichetto, who immediately
called on Goye to cross the province to the capital city of Viedma for a
powwow. Already guessing what the meeting was going to be about (his
resignation), Goye flatly refused, saying he was busy, and adding—rather
cynically, considering the circumstances—that he “didn’t want to leave the city
on its own,” because “you can see what happens when I’m absent for just 24
hours.” Undeterred, however, the governor and senator flew to Bariloche, where
they held a meeting yesterday in the airport with Mayor Goye and strongly
suggested he hand in his resignation. It was pretty clear that the two
provincial authorities purposely made no secret of the meeting because news of
it spread like wildfire throughout the national media. The situation was clear:
the highest of national and provincial Peronist officials considered the mayor
a loose cannon and were dumping him overboard before he could cause any more
damage. If he defied them, he would do so in total isolation, which would make his
viability as mayor untenable. This is particularly true since the justification
that the authorities cited for giving the mayor his walking papers was the
barely veiled extortion he allegedly perpetrated by hitting local businesses up
for “Christmas gifts” for the poorer sectors of the population if they wanted
to avoid retaliation.
In point of fact, to what extent the
national and provincial government were distancing themselves from Goye was
clear immediately after the riots, when the governor showed up and outshined the
mayor, virtually shoving him into the background and taking over. In a country
where such crimes have often gone unpunished, Weretilneck praised the bravery
of police in standing up to the rioters and revealed that the provincial
special forces had been kept busy at the local jail where a prisoner revolt
appears to also have been part of the planned disturbances. Ill-equipped regular
police were forced, then, to cope with the early part of the riots and a score
of them ended up getting injured. As a result, the governor said he would be
making sure that police received a stock of riot gear usually only issued to
the special corps. He also ordered 30 police raids, 23 of which turned up
stolen merchandise. Another one brought the discovery of a crop of cannabis
plants and residents there were placed at the disposal of a Federal judge.
Police also confiscated over a score of vehicles identified in news pictures
and security tapes as having taken part in the looting.
Clearly, investigators knew just where
to go: neighborhoods known as 34 Hectáreas , Frutillar and Km 20 (Don Bosco),
where punteros, who rather grandly
refer to themselves as “luchadores
sociales” (social fighters)—some of whom have been widely alleged to have loyalties
to Goye—complained of police harassment.
In the end, Goye’s fate would appear clear. It seems the only question is whether he decides to make it easy or hard on himself and his city.
In the end, Goye’s fate would appear clear. It seems the only question is whether he decides to make it easy or hard on himself and his city.
1 comment:
Judging by today´s (01/19/13)editorial in the Buenos Aires Herald, the chain of command for the Christmass looters involves Alicia Kirchner. Is this another instance of choosing the lowest possible link as a sacrificial lamb?
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