Mexico Sovereignty, Authority, and Power
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Transcript of Mexico Sovereignty, Authority, and Power
Mexico Sovereignty, Authority, and Power
By Bria Guitano, Danielle Adler, Jenna Rosen, and Wyatt Maxey
Constitution of 1917 February 5, 1917 Established a Federal presidential
republic Based on a presidential system
Legitimacy Citizens consider the power of their
government legitimate The Revolution of 1910-1911 was an
important source of legitimacy Citizens admire their revolutionary
leaders throughout history Consider charisma in leaders and
important attribute towards legitimacy
Legitimacy cont.
Revolution was legitimized by the formation of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in 1929
PRI was intended to stabilize political power in the hands of its leaders
PRI was an important source of legitimacy until it was successfully challenged in the late 20th century.
Legitimacy cont.
By 2006 the PRI held a minority of seats in both houses
Today sources of public authority and power are changing rapidly
Geographic Influence
Geographic InfluenceMountains and Deserts: separate regions and causes communication, transportation, and infrastructure to be difficult.Natural Resources
Oil, silver, other naturalresources are in abundance
Mexico has struggled to maintain them wisely.
Geographic InfluenceLong Border with the US
Migration and dependency issues occurMexico is often overshadowed by the US
Overpopulation (114 million people)Not enough jobsLow quality of
public servicesPollution
Geographic InfluenceUrban Population
¾ of the population lives in cities or along coastsThe move from rural to urban during the late 20th century disrupted traditional Mexican politics, including the patron-client system.
Geographic InfluenceVaried Climates
Because of its great distance from north to south, Mexico has many different climate typesMexico is creating cleaner automobiles to help their climate (Chacha). Because Mexico’s primary partnerships are in the automotive industry, this is important.
HISTORICAL TRADITIONS
AUTHORITARIANISMCame from colonial structure set up by SpainStrong-arm tactics by military-political leadersPorifirio Diaz allowed no sharing of political power beyond the small, closed elitePresident currently holds a great deal of powerAuthority has been recently questioned
POPULISMDemocratic revolutions of 1810 and 1910
significant peasant basesLed by charismatic figurescried out for more rights for Amerindians
Reflected by Zapatista movementValues the Amerindian heritage and their rightsStrongest in southern part of the country
POWER PLAYS/DIVISION WITHIN THE ELITE
Elites who led dissenters during the Revolutions of 1810 and 1910Warlords/caudillos of early 20th centuryPoliticos vs. Tecnicos of late 20th century
Politicos- old style caciques who headed camarillasTecnicos- educated, business oriented leaders
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s challengeThreatened to destroy fragile democratic structures
INSTABILITY AND LEGITIMACY ISSUESHistory full of chaos, conflict, bloodshed and violent resolutionCurrent regime leans towards instability1994- major presidential candidate assassinated
Luis Donaldo Colosio Murrieta by Mario Aburto Martinez
Gang-related violence challenges government authority
Especially in the north
Mexican Political Culture
Importance of ReligionCatholic Church
Priest leaders of populists movements since 1920sSince the early 20th century, the government developed anti-cleric positions. In result, the church’s political influence has decreased.Though the church doesn’t hold as much power anymore, Mexicans still highly value Catholicism. It indirectly influences many of their political values as well.
Patron-ClientelismIn Mexico, it is the highly powerful cliques that are based on person connections and charismatic leadership.Mexican Camarillas“I scratch your back, you scratch mine.”
CorruptionDemocratization and industrialization have challenged these systems yet Mexico continues to fall into patron-clientelism Regardless of social class, Mexican citizens can interact with political officials and gain something out of the system.Maximum political payoff
Economic Dependency
Under the United States’ shadowConstant struggle to become a more economically independent country80% of Mexican exports go to the U.S.$4 billion has accumulated in debt to the U.S.
Works Cited
Carlsen, Laura. "Mexico and the Crisis of a Dependent Economy." Americas Program. N.p., 11 Oct. 2009. Web. <http://www.cipamericas.org>.
Wood, Ethel. AP Comparative Government and Politics: An Essential Coursebook and Study Guide. 5th ed. Pennsylvania: WoodYard Publications, 2011. Print.
Hamann, Carlos. "Mexico Election Winner Faces Threat to Legitimacy." Yahoo! News Singapore. AFP News, 14 July 2012. Web. <http://sg.news.yahoo.com/mexico-election-winner-faces-threat-legitimacy-101916429.html>.
"ESLBEE.com Is A Resource for English as a Second Language Teachers. Edit This Microsummary." ESLBEE.com Is A Resource for English as a Second Language Teachers. ESLBEE, 16 Feb. 2013. Web. <http://www.aboutus.org/ESLBEE.com>.