Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube

Massive Assembly in Bolivia Calls for General Strike Against Election Postponement by Coup Government

A march of thousands of people to Ceja de El Alto in Bolivia culminated in a massive assembly to demand that the general election take place September 6 as originally planned. A large coalition of working class sectors resolved to go on an indefinite general strike until the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) lifts the coup’s government’s new postponement of the elections.

Juana Runa

July 30, 2020
Facebook Twitter Share

On July 28, a massive march was held by the Central Obrera Boliviana (COB) along with various worker, peasant, and indigenous organizations to demand that the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) of Bolivia reinstate the general elections for September 6. On July 23, the TSE announced that it would postpone the elections for the fourth time this year, consolidating the coup government’s hold on power under the pretext of taking extreme measures to combat the spread of Covid-19 in the country.

In La Paz, the march started in Senkata and reached Ceja de El Alto. A massive assembly took place, led by various groups such as the Túpac Katari Federation, the ayllus (indigenous community organizations) of Norte Potosí, groups of factory workers and miners, the Bartolina Sisa organization of peasant women, and neighborhood councils. Similar mobilizations were carried out in other regions across the country to demand elections to continue on schedule.

In the El Alto assembly, COB leader Juan Carlos Huarachi took the floor to call on the TSE to overturn the resolution that postponed the election until October 18 within 72 hours. He announced an indefinite general strike with mobilizations and blockades in many departments until the postponement of the elections is reversed.

The massive mobilization showed that the peasant, popular, and workers’ sectors believe that the deep socio-health crisis in the country can be solved through fair elections. The candidate of the Movement to Socialism (MAS), Luis Arce Catacora, has the electoral support of these sectors, largely in response to the racist coup leaders that currently control the government.

Meanwhile, in the midst of the pandemic, self-proclaimed President Jeanine Áñez and her ministers have made it very clear that they have taken the power of the state solely for profit and put it at the service of their own class interests. One hundred days after imposing a militarized quarantine, the government continues to systematically refuse to implement mass testing. For weeks now, we have seen daily reports of dozens of deaths, with bodies being collected in the streets. The people of Bolivia are mourning their loved ones while living in fear of their own government’s inhumane policies. 

Not only have the hospitals collapsed with significant casualties among the health workers, but the cemeteries and crematoriums have been overwhelmed. Access to medicine is a luxury and Bolivia is in short supply. The coup plotters spent most of their time making deals to purchase respirators at exorbitantly high prices, which were later proven to be useless to fight COVID-19 because they were in fact resuscitators. Since their own government is risking the lives of the poorest residents, many working class Bolivians are facing the worst of the outbreak.

This week, the interim government threatened a return to the rigid and militarized quarantine imposed earlier this year. The quarantine has the double purpose of “stopping” the geometric growth of COVID-19, while also attempting to contain the embryonic manifestations of class struggle that are taking form with actions such as assemblies and Tuesday’s announcement of a general strike. Unfortunately, so far this resistance and class struggle attaches all of its power to a hope that a government elected at the ballot box could be a way out of this oppressive regime.

While many oppressed sectors are pinning their hopes on voting for a MAS President, the MAS party line has continued to carry out a strategy of parliamentary negotiation with the coup government, despite its two-thirds majority in the Plurinational Legislative Assembly. MAS Senator Eva Copa, the president of the Senate, last Sunday stated that the MAS in Parliament will not hinder the new date of October 18.

The MAS strategy to negotiate in better conditions with the coup leaders shows, once again, that the MAS does not seek to defeat them in the streets but at the ballot box. This strategy was seen in Tuesday’s mobilization, which was held by the bureaucratic leadership in Ceja de El Alto. They launched the indefinite general strike with roadblocks in a bureaucratic way. For decades, they have refused to promote assemblies with grassroots delegates, the only true way to liberate the energies of the workers and the people in order to defeat the coup plotters. But the MAS bureaucracy is afraid of workers’ democracy; they know that they are hated and repudiated by broad sectors of the workers. This strategy that the MAS maintains, through bureaucracies of the social organizations and unions, is leading the coup leaders to continue supporting themselves while the positions of the MAS itself are weakened.

 

 
 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Thousands of Bolivians have taken to the streets to protest against the postponement of elections and against the regime that came to power last year after a US-backed military coup that ousted Bolivia’s first Indigenous president, Evo Morales. The protests, led by Indigenous and social movements, were sparked after the electoral authority decided to postpone the election date to October 18, supposedly because of the pandemic. It is the third time elections have been postponed. (Photos via: Centro de Estudios Nuestro Americano Chávez Kirchner – Bolivia)

A post shared by redfish (@redfishstream) on

We defend the democratic rights of workers in the countryside and the city. Working class sectors, peasants, and indigenous people deserve to have elections. However, we call for the direction of that energy towards defeating the coup leaders who are making a deadly pandemic worse for millions of working and poor people. To that end, we must demand the immediate nationalization, without compensation, of the private clinics and the centralization of the health system under the democratic control of the workers. Healthcare resources must be used to save lives and not save the businesses of the private sector. We must democratize this fundamental right. People’s lives are at stake.

To make this urgent demand viable, it is necessary to form the broadest coordination of sectors of health workers, cleaning workers, workers, peasants, indigenous peoples, women, students, and neighborhood councils to impose a way out in the struggle so that the tremendous capitalist and health crisis that we have on our backs is not paid for by the working people, but by the rich and the capitalists.

Originally published in La Izquierda Diario

Translated by Kimberly Ann.

Facebook Twitter Share

Latin America

Coldest Weather in Decades Hits Brazil — Climate Change Is to Blame

This month, on the heels of the country’s worst drought in a century, Brazil has experienced historic cold weather. The effects on agriculture could have negative consequences across the world.

Otto Fors

July 30, 2021
An artistic rendering of a silhouette carrying a Cuban flag

The Situation on the Island and Its Prospects: Interview with a Young Cuban Communist

La Izquierda Diario interviews Taliesin Álvarez, a member of the Union of Young Communists and of the Hermanos Saíz Association, and a member of the editorial board of the left-wing Cuban blog Comunistas, about the demonstrations in Cuba.

Milton D'León

July 26, 2021

Cuba: Causes and Consequences of July 11

In the midst of multiple crises, Cuba saw the most dramatic protests in 27 years.

Claudia Cinatti

July 25, 2021
A silhouette of an adult running, against a background of fire and smoke. It is night time and the street is full of burning or burned debris

Revolt in Martinique against Colonial Management of the Health Crisis

With the health situation in Martinique continuing to deteriorate, a revolt broke out this past weekend after the government announced it was reinstituting a curfew and extending the vaccine passport.

Emile Causse

July 23, 2021

MOST RECENT

Pro-Palestine protesters at a march in Philadelphia. Palestinian flags in the background while someone holds up a sign that says "Freedom for Palestine."

Temple University Rank and Filers Release Palestine Solidarity Statement

Rank and filers at Temple University in Philly are demanding their union local and national fight to end all support for Israel and join the cause of Palestinian workers.

Jason Koslowski

August 3, 2021
Four healthcare workers, including co-author of this article Mike Pappas, stand in scrubs and masks in front of an Amazon warehouse holding signs in support of better wages and safer working conditions for Amazon workers.

What Billionaire Space Flights Mean to Healthcare Workers

While the Covid-19 pandemic continues to rage around the globe and climate disaster is destroying the planet, billionaires are taking joyrides to space. Two healthcare workers who worked throughout the pandemic respond.

Mike Pappas

August 2, 2021
An older woman wearing a hat holds a sign that reads "No More Unjust Revictions: I Lost My Home of 36 Years"

Eviction Moratorium Expired, Millions Face Homelessness

After a half-hearted attempt to extend the eviction moratorium failed, the House of Representatives left for summer vacation.

Emma Lee

August 2, 2021
Image of rubble and a lot of smoke in the background. People stand in front of the wreckage.

Joe Biden is Bombing Somalia

Despite claims to reduce drone strikes, Joe Biden is bombing Somalia.

K.S. Mehta

August 1, 2021