Many commentators have said that Zelaya sought to re-write the constitution to extend his time in office. Yet nothing indicates that that was the case. Leading up to the coup, Zelaya was pushing for a referendum on 28 June in which the ballot question was to be: "Do you agree that, during the general elections of November 2009 there should be a fourth ballot to decide whether to hold a Constituent National Assembly that will approve a new political constitution?" This non-binding referendum - not plans from Zelaya to expand his power – was enough to push right wing and military leaders to organise a coup.
If the Honduran people approved the formation of a constitutional assembly in November, it would likely take years – as it did recently in Bolivia – to rewrite the document. Zelaya would not be president as he would not be running in the upcoming elections. His term in office finishes in January 2010, too short a time to complete a national assembly's rewriting of the constitution.
09 July 2009
putting down the class struggle
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So as usual the right wing and military are afraid of the people and take steps to prevent the people's will from becoming reality...
ReplyDeletePlainly backasswards, but, go figure, the masses don't seem to have the hang of this making their will manifest thing.... Whereas, the plutocrats and their militaries clearly do. The really sad part is that most of the militaries would quickly switch to the people's point of view if we ever decided to rise up and kick these sociopaths in the teeth.
ReplyDeleteWhy is that poster homoerotic?
ReplyDelete.
Well, I didn't notice, but maybe it will attract starving gays to the military?
ReplyDelete:-P
Of course, there are those who say the whole military thing is really just the enactment of homoerotic fantasies in plutocrats....
ReplyDeleteDon' ask, don't tell...
ReplyDelete