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Caribbean-Latin America
Bolivia Panel Delays Constitution Vote
2006-08-30
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) - The assembly rewriting Bolivia's constitution, bogged down by infighting, delayed voting Tuesday on a motion supported by the president that would give it supreme authority to draw up a new framework without having to answer to Congress or the courts. The assembly began earlier this month, and elected delegates have one year to create a new constitution for the South American country.

Disputes between delegates from President Evo Morales' Movement Toward Dictatorship Socialism party led them to put off voting on the measure, seen correctly by some as a major power grab by the populist leader. A vote could come later this week. Morales, a communist leftist elected as Bolivia's first Indian president in December, envisions the assembly as a means to undo the centuries-old dominance of the European-descended minority and to create more opportunity for the poor, indigenous majority.

He has called for the assembly to be declared ``original'' - or free to create an entirely new Bolivia without interference of the current government. ``We want no power to exist above the assembly, so that it can develop in absolute freedom and according to the mandate of the people,'' said Robert Aguilar, a delegate for the Movement Toward Socialism party, or MAS.
So that they can impose the dictatorship of the proletariat without further delay.
Opponents, though, say declaring the assembly all-powerful goes against the body's own bylaws, and would divide the country in two. They fear Morales could use it to shut down all branches of government but his own.

``It would be a grave political error, and a grave tactical error,'' said conservative former vice president Victor Hugo Cardenas of the National Revolutionary Movement party. Cardenas said conservatives would decry such an assembly - and any government it would create - as illegitimate, creating the ``possible danger of confrontations, which no Bolivians wish for.''
I think Morales and his thugs relish the idea.
Conservative party Podemos, which has sought to limit the assembly's mandate to merely editing Bolivia's current constitution, claims the MAS delegates plan to establish a totalitarian regime. ``The only thing Morales aspires to is the complete power to throw out the legitimately chosen authorities,'' said Ruben Dario Cuellar, head of the constitutional delegates from Podemos.
Who needs them when you have a Man of the People™? If it was good enough for Cuba it should be good enough for Bolivia.
MAS holds a thin majority in the assembly, but not the two-thirds needed to control the 255-member assembly outright. To obtain minor-party support for the motion, MAS on Sunday agreed to adhere to the two-thirds requirement, meaning the opposition still will have the power to eventually block the new document from becoming the law of the land. However, some MAS delegates Tuesday were still hoping to disregard the two-thirds rule and control the assembly through their party's simple majority.
"Rules? Rules?! We don't need no stinkin' rules!"
Any changes to government structures approved by the assembly won't go into effect until the new constitution it creates is passed by a nationwide referendum at the end of 2007.
Posted by:Steve White

#2  What time is it Leonard? It's 18mm till exposed camel toe Gus.
Posted by: Besoeker   2006-08-30 13:02  

#1  I vote for the naked belly party
Posted by: Captain America   2006-08-30 00:20  

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