“We
won”, [Vicente Fox] said simply, and his eyes filled with tears.”' (Preston,
J. Dillon, S., 2004, p. 26) The event that took place on July 2,
2000, was an emotional day to remember
not only for Mexico's National Action Party (PAN), but also for the citizens of
Mexico who wanted to see a change in their government. It took seventy-one years to pry open the
semi-authoritarian hegemony of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and
the PAN party did just that, winning the presidential election in the summer of
2000. This paper will address the events that lead up to this extraordinary
Mexican election event in 2000. Thus leads to this paper's opinion: Mexico is
coasting toward being a failed state if the government loses control of its
accountability and the rule of law due to decades of entrenched corruption,
born out of the one-party rule of the PRI.
If one looks
at the early history of Mexico, democracy is not part of its political
history. The roots of Mexico's national
identity recedes way before the arrival of Spanish Explorer Hernan Cortez in
1519. The land was inhabited by
indigenous people such as the peaceful Mayans, whom lived in and around the
Gulf Coast area. They were noted for
their advancement in farming, artistry, mathematics and astronomy.
(history.com, 2013) Unlike Mayans, the
Aztecs were more authoritarian. They
resided in the central fertile valley of Mexico and built their capital city on
marsh land near a lake called Tenochtitlan (Mexico City). The Aztecs ruled other tribes and established
an empire with city-state governors, tax collectors, courts, and ruling
'military-religious' castes. In comparison between the Mexico's modern regime
and Aztec rule: “both forged a
centralized, authoritarian, hierarchical, stable system.” (Levy, Bruhn, 2001,
p.36) )
In 1519,
Diego Velasquez, a Spanish conquistador, sent Hernando Cortez to Mexico to
conquer territories in the 'New Spain' for the Spanish Crown. (westmeade.net,
2013) In March of that year, Cortez
landed in Tabasco, where he learned about the great Aztec society ruled by
Mocteruma (Spanish), [aka Montezuma (English)]
from the natives of Tabasco. In
November 1519, Cortez marched in to Tenochtitlan with his army of men and
weaponry ready to do battle.
Instead, Cortez and his army were
warmly welcomed by Mocteruma. Cortez was
ironically mistaken for the Aztec's religious belief “white gods would one day
appear”. (Levy, Bruhn, 2001, p.37).
Although
Cortez was outnumber by the Aztecs, Cortez weaponry was superior and Mocteruma
was subsequently confined, and through
him, Cortez began to ruled the empire.
When Mocteruma died, his young nephew, the defiant Cuauhtemoc became the
next emperor. He eventually drove the
Spaniards out of the city. Cortez
reorganized and later returned with Aztec's native rivals and erased all the
city's structures and the remaining Aztec populace, approximately 240,000 were
believed murdered. Afterward, a new city
(Mexico City) was built over the devastation and eventually became the main
center for the new world. (Levy, Bruhn, 2001.p36-.37) (history.com, 2013)
(Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p.475-476)
Unlike
Colonial English settlers, the Spanish conquerors assimilated with the Indian
natives in order to impose Spanish values, religion ( Catholic), and
privileges. The English settlers were
looking for freedom from the tentacles of England; therefore, they pushed aside
or at times killed the nomadic tribes in order to establish themselves and
germinate a democratic development in the newly undeveloped North America. In contrast, the Spanish fought a well
established society, not “nomadic” tribes. (Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p. 476) The Spaniards integrated a hierarchy system.
The top of the hierarchy system held the native Spaniards ( born in Spain),
called peninsulares or gachupines, most of whom came from titled families and
held the highest ranking posts in both the government and the clergy. Second, the creoles, (people born in Spanish
America from Native Spanish parents) and mestizo (mixed offspring), people born
from Spanish American and Native Indians.
Last, were the indigenous (native Indians) populace, who eventually
succumbed into indentured servants to the Spaniards. (Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p.
476)
The
Spanish colonies' resources, such as gold and silver, were siphoned to enrich
only Mother Spain, thus prohibiting free trade.
While at the same time, little was done politically and/or economically
to the new colonies, as an example when the Spanish settlers carved out large
estates (Spanish haciendas) at the “expense of the traditional communal land
holders”. ( Levey, Bruhn, 2001, p. 38)
The English settlers establish self-government prior to the
Revolutionary War, where the self-government in the Spanish colonies lacked.
(Hauss, 2012, p.476) The Spanish
colonialism did not support nor encourage equality, democracy, or national
independence. Mother Spain and the
church became the guarantors of elitist authoritarian rule that ensured
political stability during the colony era. (Levy, Bruhn, 2001, p.38) (Hauss,
Haussman, 2012, p.476)
“Every
colony that is well treated honours its parent state, but becomes estranged
from it by injustice. For colonists are not sent forth on the understanding
that they are to be slaves of those who remain behind, but that they are to be
their equals.” ~ Thucydides, “Causes of the War,” (Bazant, J., 1977, p.5) Revolutions that took place in Mexico's
history, usually suggested that political power and economic events were
endangered for the elites. (Bazant, 1997, p.5)
In 1804, Spain went under a considerable financial strain due to the war
with Great Britain. Spain went down the
road in forcefully redeeming mortgage loans and selling farms, cattle, houses
and businesses that were used for endowments and charitable foundations used
for pious work, from the colonies in 1805-1808.
This extraction process was sufficient enough to alienate the elite
landowners from Spain along with others. (Bazant, 1997, p.6)
On September
16, 1810 the church bells rang, alerting the peasants to come to the church
yard. Father Manuel Hidalgo (a creole)
called for Mexican independence from Spain: “"Long live religion!, Long
live Our Lady of Guadalupe! Long live the Americas and death to the corrupt
government!". (Consular, 1996)
Hidalgo was not successful in his cause for independence for his people.
He did initiate the struggle for independence from the Spanish rule that
eventually lead into guerrilla warfare as the masses Mestizos and Indians rose
against the Gachupines. (Bazant, 1997, p.12-19)
Mexican
independence finally occurred in February 24,1821, as the Plan of Iguala. Never the less, independence failed to
develop a stable government that could defend its national territory. Rather the young independent nation created a
vicious cycle of political instability and economic failure for years to come,
to say nothing of, threatened its sovereignty from foreign onslaughts. Such is
the case with Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna description by Levy and Szekely: “In 1848, Mexico's most despised, traitorous,
duplicitous native son presided over the loss of roughly half of Mexico's
territory in the war with the United States. [. . . ] [From the 1820s to the 1950s. . . .[a]lmost
no one could establish a viable government and a viable economic base”. (Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p. 477) (Levy, Bruhn,
2001, p.39-44)
In light of democratization, Hauss and Haussman depicts a nation's
potential for democracy: “The first
years of any regime are critical, [. . .] it is new and fragile. […] [If]
democracy can get through the first few elections, [ . . .] it can survive the
transition from its first leadership to the opposition”. (Hauss, Haussmann,
2012, p.327) Since Mexico's independence in
1821, the first form of government was not a republic but a monarchy. Augustin de Lturbide helped manipulate Spanish
emissaries to grant Mexico independence from Spain. He declared himself Emperor Augustin 1. Augustin lasted one year before he was later
executed by General Santa Anna. Then
over a thirty-year time period, General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna made himself
known fracturing and causing chaos in the new nation, only for his self
interest. From 1833-1855, he became
president eleven times. He enjoyed more
of a centralize or a less democratic government. ( about.com, 2013) In 1861, after an assortment of short-lived
presidents, General Benito Juarez took over the country. By 1864, Juarez was forced out by the French
for repayment and replaced by Austrian Maximilian, another Emperor. Three years later Maximilian was removed and
executed by the previous General Juarez.
In 1876, General Porfirio Diaz become the president-elect by a
coup. His campaign promoted the idea
that “presidents should not be allowed to be reelected” (Hauss, Huassman, 2012,
p. 477) Diaz's dictatorship lasted from
1876-1880 and again from 1884-1911. On
the positive side during his reign, it was Diaz, who stabilized the country,
encouraged foreign investment, and improved the economic infrastructure, such
as the building extensive railroads, oil refineries, sugar mills and electrical
generation facilities. ( Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p. 477)
Thus
we come to the present and address why Mexico is leaning in the direction in
the future of being a failed state. What
this paper has established thus far, is democracy has never been in the
forefront. The common denominators are
wealth, power, that are both in bed with corruption. Second, in order to understand why the
election of 2000 was successful, it is important to understand the following:
first, how the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) evolved into power in
the 1920s and reigned for seventy-one years, using corruption, manipulation,
and exploited patronage in order to sustain their longevity. Second, the accumulated events that lead to
the first 2000 democratic contest of Vincente Fox President.
One aspect of the PRI longevity he PRI manipulated the constitution The revised radical constitution
in 1917 was constructed and had many of the principles of the original 1857
constitution, with three branches of government ( executive, bicameral
legislative and judicial branches), and competitive elections where most public
officials were directly elected by the people. Although its social content gave
it the title of the first modern socialist constitution, it preceded the 1977
constitution of the former Soviet Union (bucknel.edu), the Mexican document
replicates many principles and concepts
of the constitution of the United States. The liberal concepts include
federalism (31 states - sub divided into two thousand municipalities plus the
Federal District/ Mexico City, each with state governor and unicameral
legislature), separation of powers, and a bill of rights. The 1917 constitution adds a strong
nationalist declaration, asserting Mexico's control over its natural resources.
It also recognizes social and labor rights (right to unionized), separation of
church and state, and universal male suffrage. Reflecting the varied social
backgrounds and political school of thought of its framers, the constitution of
1917 includes various contradictory provisions, endorsing within the same text
socialism, capitalism, liberal democracy, authoritarian corporatism, and a host
of unimplemented provisions for specific social reforms. (Hauss, Hausman, 2012,
p.491-493) (gavilan.edu, 2009)
One highlight
of the 1917 constitution noted that the president elect could not stand for
reelection after a six (sexenio) year term and after the end of the six-year
term was expected to leave political life.
There is no vice president. But
according to Frank Brandenburg: “Mexico
has been able to avoid personal dictatorship by retiring their dictators every
six years.” (Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p. 491)
Unlike the U.S.A. president, the 1917 constitution gives the Mexican
president a sizable amount of control such as the following: Only the president can promulgate and issue
laws. Subject to the ratification of the
senate, the president may appoint and dismiss cabinet officials and almost all
employees of the executive branch such as ambassadors, consuls general,
magistrates of the Supreme Court, and the mayor of the Federal District. The
president also appoints the magistrates of the Supreme Court of the Federal
District, subject to ratification by the Chamber of Deputies. Again, the
patron-client relationship is very important here. All government positions are dependent on a
hierarchy patron-client system where 'it's not what you know, but who you
know'. Presidents
have historically played a decisive role in the selection and removal of state
governors. Last, choosing one's
successor has allowed outgoing presidents to select individuals who personify
either change or continuity with past policies, as demanded by circumstances
and public opinion. (Hauss, Haussman,
2012, p. 491-493) (gavilan.edu, 2009)
President
elect General Plutarco Elias Calles (1924-1928), a revolutionary organizer was
a presume constitution stickler.
(Bazant, 1977, p171-172) Calles
was rabid about exterminating Catholicism in Mexico and believed by some
scholars, that his oppression of Mexican Catholics was responsible for sparking
the three-year long rebellion between the Church and State Cristero War. The 1917 constitution included five articles
that Calles wanted to reenforce; thereby, instigating the war. Article 3 called
for only secular education in the schools; Article 5 outlawed monastic
orders; Article 24 forbade public
worship outside the church; Article 27 placed restrictions on the right of
religious organizations to hold property as well as foreigners and Article 130
disadvantaged clergy members of basic rights and made them in effect
second-class citizens. Priests and nuns were denied the right to wear clerical
attire, to vote, to criticize government officials or to comment on public
affairs in religious periodicals. (Tuck, 2000)
In 1927, a
lay-back United States' ambassador, Dwight Whitney Morrow, came to Mexico. Morrow wanted to end the
religious conflict for both humanitarian and practical reasons. So he started to smooth President Calles gloomy
feathers through frequent cordial breakfasts with Calles, at the same time,
address the religious dispute as well as topics on oil and irrigation. The end
of the Cristero Rebellion resulted after the more accommodating President
Emilio Portes Gil came into office. On
May 1929, Morrow, and Father John J. Burke (from the U.S.A.) persuaded Gil to
respond: "the Catholic clergy, when they wish, may renew the exercise of
their rites with only one obligation, that they respect the laws of the
land." (Tucker, 1997) In late June
1929, church bells were heard everywhere in Mexico; at which time Morrow turns
to his wife "Do you hear that, Betty?" he said. "I have reopened
the churches in Mexico."(Tucker, 1997).
Just as
important, ex-President Calles developed a concept that would provide
continuity from one president to the next, by forming a “political party that
could control the nomination and hence the election of the next
president”. (Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p. 479)
Calles and his party supporters (consist of political bosses, military
strongmen, labor unions and peasant organization) eventually evolved into the
National Revolution Party in 1929 (later to become PRI in 1946), where Calles's principle concept became a
reality. ( countrystudies.us) After Gil,
the PRI's next president-elect was the charismatic General Lazaro Cardenas
(1934-40). He ended Calles hold on
Mexico and provided a degree of social justice.
He initiated major reforms which include the following: made a major effort to build rural schools,
redistributed land (1917 Constitution, Article 27) to landless peasants under
communal farming called ejido, strengthened unions (Confederation of Mexican
Workers and two peasants organizations (under 1917 Constitution, Article 123),
and nationalized foreign-owned petroleum industry (PEMEX). (Tucker, 1997) (Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p. 479) (mongabay.com, 2013, p.1)
Since the
revolution until 2000, the PRI has governed Mexician citizens as subjects under
a semi-authorial or semi- democratic rule of the elites. The PRI solidified
their power by having the outgoing PRI president select the new presidential
candidate after getting a 'thumbs-up' from the PRI party. Although the citizens of Mexico were free
to vote for their favorite candidate (one sign of democracy), the PRI had means
of assuring the presidency through various degrees of voting fraud and control
over the Federal Election Commission (CFE), whose responsibility were to count
and verified the vote returns. “Votes were . . . bought either directly or
through the provision of benefits [given to] a neighborhood, village, or social
group”. ( Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p.484)
Over time, this almost was accepted as normal occurrence. However, what became more transparent during
President Carlos Salinas de Gortari's era (1988-1992), was that the press began
to write about the fraudulent PRI activities and the PRI party did not stop
them. (histclo.com)
The hegemonic
PRI had other supportive influences that maintain their longevity. Mexican society had a strong patronage
system, 'patron-client' (camarillas) with a motto: “You scratch my back, I'll
scratch yours”. (caroddoapclasses.com) The PRI kept loyal supporters happy by
giving them opportunity for jobs and positions within the government or in
other cases awarded contracts or jobs to do work for the government, just to
get the vote. In other cases with the
working class, the PRI assured better wages, health insurance, and better
working conditions. Keeping control over
the peasants, working class and the bureaucracy assured a base foundation for
less conflict and longevity for the PRI.
As time
progressed, corruption became more flagrant and PRI's policies involving
certain segments of Mexican society grew less significant. For example, days
prior to the 1968 Olympics games in Mexico City, anti-PRI protestors considered
it was an opportune time to use the international press for the Mexican
students to publicize the demand for more political freedom and to end the
restrictive use of police force. The
results, President Gustavo Diaz Ordez, wanted to put the protest to an end,
because the situation did not shed a good light on Mexico. Consequently, because of unknown gun fire
that came from the direction of the protesting crowd, hundreds of demonstrators
were killed by the military and police force that surrounded them. (histclo.com
p. 2)
The unstable economy in the 1980's due to
fluctuation of rising and falling international oil prices, became a burden on the PRI, which raised
questions about Mexico's one-party rule.
Mexico economy was unable to adjust between falling oil prices and the
huge debt that occurred during the oil boom because of official corruption
squandering the wealth of the country through wasteful spending and inflated
payrolls. Subsequently, money that was
going into subsidies, was being pulled back, along with peso devaluation and
seized dollar accounts. As growing
amount of Mexican citizens, especially the middle class, were becoming
disenchanted with the PRI government, weakening the 'ritualistic' pattern
founded by Calles and Cardenas. (mongabay.com, 2013, p. 7-8 )
To restore
future economic growth, two new technocratic presidents, Miguel de la Madrid
(1982-88) and his successor, a Harvard-grad-political-economist-technocrat
Carlos Salinas de Gortari (1988-1994) restructured a program that
systematically retracted most state ownership and regulation of key
industries. The goal for restructuring
was to promote Mexico into the global economy by promoting pro-business and
free-marketing. (countrystudies.us) (Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p. 481) To make Mexico more attractive to foreign
investment, Salinas amended Article 27 of the 1917 Constitution (land protectionism) allowing the ejido or community land to
either be rented or sold into larger efficient farms and be replaced with
products such as beef, timber, and oil, for exportation. By reforming Article 27, Salinas also open
the door for the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFT) with U.S.A. and
Canada, to be implemented. On January 1,
1994, the same day the NAFT was activated, the Mexican State of Chiapas
uprising occurred due to the fear of losing agriculture tariff protection and
to shame the Mexican government. The
Mayan Indians relied on the tariff protection from the smell of corn, beans and
other products in order to provide enough income to maintain their basic
livelihood. (american.edu)
Equally
important, during the same time Madrid and Salinas presided over Mexico, their
downplay of the PRI's traditional populist and nationalist agenda produced an
intraparty split (between career politician-populist and inexperienced
technocrats). “The rift develop into the
first major mass defection from the PRI ranks”. (mongabay.com, 2013, p. 1) The former governor and son of President
Cardenas, Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, along with Porfirio Ledo (former PRI secretary
general) resign from the PRI in 1988 in contest of Salinas's nomination and
neoliberal policies produced by Madrid.
Cardenas and Ledo created a coalition of left-wing parties that consist
of labor unions, and grassroots organizations known as Party of Democratic
Revolution (PRD). Cardenas became a
presidential contestant in 1988. His loss, according to Hauss was due to the
most “extensive voting fraud in Mexican history”. (Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p.
489) In 2006, the PRD's candidate
Obrador lost by a half of a percentage point to the president-elect
Calderon. (Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p.
488-489) (mongabay.com, 2013, p.8)
After the assassination of a popular PRI
candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio on campaign, Ernesto Zedillo won the 1994
presidential election under unusual vote-counting circumstances. (countrystudies.us) However, Zedillo vowed to change Mexican
politics and he did just that. In 1996,
Zedillo, PAN, and PRD signed an agreement establishing political reform that
would eliminate the PRI's control of the election process. The Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) brought
legitimacy to ballot counting. First,
voters were now required to have registrations picture ID cards in order to
vote. Monitoring was established at most
voting establishments. Second, vote
tallies could be reported the same day of the voting, leaving less room for
fraudulent manipulation. Thus between 1997-2000, free elections open the
possibilities for advancement in the other two principle parties, PRD and PAN.
In the congressional election that took place in 1997, the PRI lost control of
the lower house also known as the Chamber of Deputies.
As
mentioned earlier in the paper, the legislature branch consist of a bicameral
congress divided into an upper chamber (Senate) and a lower chamber (Chamber of
Deputies). Both chamber are responsible
for passing important legislation; however, as mention earlier, the executive
(president) is the one who initiates 90 percent of all legislation. Each senate seat is elected by direct vote
for six years, two members per state and two representing the Federal District,
total of 64 seats. Since 1993, Salinas
government double the size to 128, where one of each four seat goes to the
party that comes in second. The Deputies
of Chambers consist of 500 seats, 200 members are elected for three years by
proportional representation from among the large 'plurinominal' districts and
the rest from single-member districts.
Although all members of congress can not serve immediate reelection, but
they can be reelected during nonconsecutive terms. (countrystudies.us)
Hence this paper arrives to the main opposition party to the PRI, the
National Action Party (PAN).
Historically the PAN has been in opposition with the PRI since 1939 when
it was founded by Manuel Gomez Moran.
The PAN appeared as a conservative reaction to a Cardinas government's
nationalization and land seizure. The party mainly consisted of people from the
Catholic Church, the business sector, and groups alienated by the left-wing
populist. The PAN had strong support in
the county's wealthiest and urbanized regions in the north and center of
Mexico. It did not appeal to urban labor nor peasant groups because PAN
preferred the role of limited government and was very pro-business and
market, However, in 1992, PAN did align
itself with PRI Salinas administration with land reforms and economic reforms. In the past, PAN has campaigned in favor of
breaking up the ejidos into individual owned plots. Pan separated itself from the PRI by putting
emphasis on democratization, eradication of government corruption, and
additional electoral reforms during the mid 1990s where it began to win
votes. By 1992, PAN's campaign slogan
“for Mexico without lies” (countrystudies.us), controlled more than 100
municipal governments and three governorships.
The door was left wide-open for the charismatic, Harvard educated Catholic
Vincente Fox Quesada, with strong right-wing roots, to capthe 2000 presidential
victory. (countrstudies.us) Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p.486-488)
Now the question rests with why Mexico may be leaning toward a failed
state. If that is the case, where does Mexico go into the future. With this in mind, the paper will address the
failed state issue first. As mentioned
before, economically, Mexico has its economy stability is dependent on who is
in office and the global market. As we
have seen thus far, is the longevity of the PRI did not succeed in building a
modern, productive Mexico instead is weigh-down by massive dept. It still remains a Third-World country with
endemic levels of poverty. Since NAFTA
was implemented, the economic reforms that came afterward has impacted the
chiapas region, it did not result in a more productive agriculture system. These reforms replaced the traditional
subsistence farming of the Mayan Indians with cattle ranching, timber
manufacturing, and oil production. This
left vacancy for indigenous displacement, migration to the U.S. and increase in
drug cartel activity.
Second, oil production is rated fifth in the world according to the
oildrum.com, yet according to Hauss, “Mexico's second largest source of foreign
income comes in form of remittances from its citizens living in the U.S.”.
(Hauss, Haussman, 2012, p. 472) The
one-party rule brought stability, but cannot take credit in succeeding in
creating a modern economy which provides a decent living to 'all', not just
middle class and upper class citizens
the Mexican people , not just middle class and upper class
citizens. The failure has meant millions
of people have immigrated to the U. S. in order to seek a decent paying job.
Third, Mexico now has an active three party system, whereby, each is
capable in winning elections. During the
PAN's Fox and Calderon government, the needed change that the people wanted,
has been limited because of gridlock in policy making due different parties in
congress. The three party system also
stifles risk-taking on controversial issues without the fear of being damage or
hard to produce partisan alignment.
Fourth, transparency has never been a slogan in which the PRI would use
nor has it involved individualism. The main objective was to stay in
power. Every political system during the
PRI reign had corruption as part of its facade and according to Jorge Chabot
talking about Mexico: “corruption seem
to part of the our DNA”. (Lennex,
2013) Some scholars might add that
corruption is so “embedded in the [Mexico's] society that there's no prospect
of eliminating or even curbing it anytime soon”. (Lennex)
Corruption in the security forces and judiciary, thanks to the PRI
legacy created an atmosphere that has allowed the drug cartels to use Mexico as
a conduit to get their drugs to the U.S., thus, causing violent fighting
between drug cartels and authorities in certain parts of Mexico. According to Austin Bay, Mexican said with
pride: “In 2000, PAN's Vincente Fox became
president. Political evolution ended the dictatorship, not revolution”. (Bay,
2012) PAN's Calderon (2006-2012) did
aim to create a modern and just society by attacking the drug lords and either
imprisoned or killed them. He also
attempted to systemically reform Mexico, politically, economically and
institutionally. (Hawley, Solache, 2008)
Now in 2012, a new PRI Pena is president; will he be able to continue
the attack on corruption?
So what can Mexico do to improve.
First according to analyst:
“Civil society must take responsibility”. (Samuels, 2013) Regardless who is elected, Mexican cannot
expect their elected leader to change the country's culture. Second, the rule of law needs to be respected
and enforced. Mexico needs honorable
people in office and a more effective judicial system. Third,
Mexico needs to take control of its debt. Producing a more liberal or market- oriented
economy can promote income that stays in Mexico instead flowing elsewhere. Allow more entrepreneur business that will
jump start the economy. fifth, control
the corruption. Business and Mexican citizens need to feel safe without feeling
that there has to be a bribe in order to be safe or to grow a private
business. Last, above all, the press
needs to be free to report on all life's events, negatively or positively. People need to know what is going on in order
to make good decisions about their government.
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