Saturday, September 29, 2007

Mano aguada, lengua trabada



The ambiguity of Álvaro Colom's political programme is naturally complemented by his personal deficiencies of elocution.

This is his third tilt at the highest office in Guatemala; he has therefore built up a considerable debt to his backers, many of whom are noted for their shadiness. It is his last chance.

He also has a problematic wife. Sandra Torres Casanova was, according to rumours in circulation, the one time lover of Guerrilla commander 'Comandante Isaías' who spent most of the eighties holed up on the Tajmulco volcano near San Marcos. She herself went by the name of 'Marta' then and regularly assisted the insurgents with logistics...and one noted kidnapping, it is said. Her personal circle, including her private secretary, still apparently fraternise rather intimately with the old guerrilla leadership, and Señora Colom is also said to have ties with exiled former President Jorge Antonio Serrano Elías.

She has been largely kept under wraps during the 2007 election, no doubt because Colom's opponents four years ago were able to successfully intimate that she had an undue influence over her husband.

Colom himself has consistently been the subject of 'black' rumours. That he drinks, that he is a closet Maya priest. His last campaign was derailed by allegations of corruption that he eventually managed to disprove, but many still suspect that his UNE party has connections with organised crime and the narcos.

Many middle-class voters don't want to have this mumbler representing their nation abroad.

Yet UNE's essentially centre-left positioning would in theory represent a significant change of direction in Guatemalan politics and Colom has a much better chance than Pérez Molina of forming an effective majority government in the congress (in which UNE is now the largest single group).

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I find it sad that people pick on someone's speech disability to judge his capacity to lead a country. I find even sadder that you repeat rumors and hearsay, and worst that you claim that "many middle class voters don't want this mumbler represent them".

I thought you had lived or lived in Guatemala. Obviously you missed some history lessons, or worse, you endorse the opposition: the heirs of a military regime responsible for the worst years of our history.

Sad. Show more respect, please.

A middle class Guatemalan

Inner Diablog said...

Sad or not, people DO pick on Colom's manner of speech. It is therefore one factor in this battle for the presidency.

If I had a cedula and could vote I'd plumb for him rather than Pérez Molina, but both candidates have defects and rumour has a key role to play in Guatemala's elections - this post was an attempt to expose the (mis)information that surrounds many voters.

It does amaze me that someone like the General could be ahead in the polls leading up to the second round. I could just say that any middle-class Guatemalans that vote for him are "stupid" (or had missed their own history) lessons, but the reality is that there ARE factors which turn them off Colom and UNE.