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#3219: election 'fever' : a comment
From:HYSEKA@aol.com
In a message dated 4/11/00 1:55:45 AM Eastern Daylight Time, Charles Arthur
wrote:
<< b) Time and again, it is written that Aristide hopes to have the
legislative elections postponed until later in the year when they will
coincide with the Presidential election. This strategy is, so everybody
writes, designed so that his Fanmi Lavalas candidates can 'ride into power
on Aristide's coat-tails'.
The fist point is that such a political approach is not at all
unusual - indeed it is exactly what happens in most respected democracies
such as the US and the UK where a party leader attempts to use his/her high
public profile and/or popularity to help candidates of his/her party win
seats in the legislature. Why is it then so sinister in the case of Aristide
and Haiti?
>>
I agree wholeheartedly with your argument. However, I must conceed that it
may not stand in Haiti's case. This is a country that is only now
experiencing with Democracy. The opposition is very, very frustrated for
having not been able to make inroads in the political process. We must admit
that, it is not Lavalas fault. In fact, we do have a free press in Haiti, and
the unfortunate death of Jean Dominique the pioneer, will not hamper it.
But, the majority of the population seems to firmly stand behind the leader
of the Lavalas party and the political machine he leads. It is thus probably
correct to state, that the majority would vote in waves for his party, if
both the presidential, and the parliamentary and municipal elections took
place at the same time. This would have created a more uneven situation. God
knows what this opposition would do to disrupt government, considering the
inflamatory statements of many.
It is better in a matter of fairness, to give that opposition an "artificial
chance" at success, so long as the process itself is not rigged with
irregularities.
This is also why I agree with Préval, when he asked the Electoral Council
(CEP), for a full accounting of what has been accomplished so far, prior to
setting a firm date for elections. I also think, despite the pressure and
concerns of the international community, that he is being really fair to all
parties doing it that way.
I am by the way very optimistic, that the CEP and the government will reach
soon a reasonable conclusion (i.e. elections date), that will satisfy all
parties in that conflict.
Hyppolite Pierre