Judgment Day for Bolivia's Embattled President
• Bolivia’s Congress met on Tuesday March 8 and unanimously decided not to accept President Carlos Mesa’s resignation.
• Nevertheless, the political position of President Mesa has become untenable due to incessant squabbling over the
country’s natural gas reserves and the prospect of more bloody street demonstrations.
• Mesa has no other option but to negotiate with his nation’s dissidents.
• A make or break decision for Mesa’s seventeen-month presidency is at stake because, unless he is able to develop a
game plan with the full participation of campesinos and the indigenous, he cannot effectively rule.
• Mesa cannot resort to military support because of the explosive impact it would have on the nation.
The future of Carlos Mesa’s seventeen-month presidency met its first test on March 8, as the Bolivian Congress decided
unanimously to refuse the president’s unexpected resignation. Mesa’s decision comes at a time of unparalleled civil
unrest in this South American country. Recent nationwide blockades, instigated by various segments of the political
spectrum, have crippled the Andean nation’s economy. Consequently, Mesa’s government has been left with few options to
deflate the increasingly polarized domestic environment. “I cannot continue to govern besieged by a national blockage
that strangles the country,” Mesa declared in a statement on March 6. His impromptu decision shortly afterward to offer
his resignation to Congress represented a final attempt to end the political quagmire that has engulfed his impoverished
country. The outcome of Mesa’s political gamble was in his favor, at least temporarily, as legislators refused to allow
him to step down -- but it is one thing to have the politicians on your side rather than the citizenry.
Squabble Over Bolivia’s Natural Gas Reserves
In October 2003 President Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada was forced from office by demonstrators opposed to his neoliberal
policies and Mesa, his vice president, ascended to the presidency. A former journalist and political independent, as
president Mesa has faced unabated challenges to his domestic agenda. The exploitation of the country’s vast natural gas
reserves has been the principal cause of civil unrest over the last two years and represented the main impetus behind
his decision to tender his resignation. He wanted to treat the gas as a commercial product while the country’s largely
indigenous population looked upon it as a national legacy.
By attempting to exercise greater government control over Bolivia’s domestic resources, the embattled president has been
torn between two polarized sectors of Bolivian society. On the one hand, regional leaders in the country’s conservative
and prosperous Santa Cruz and Tarija provinces have demanded greater local autonomy over their region’s lucrative
natural gas reserves. These demands have fuelled secessionist tendencies within Bolivia’s eastern provinces, which have
systematically weakened Mesa’s attempts to bolster national unity behind his domestic policies. Similarly, the nation's
various indigenous groups, in particular Movimiento al Socialismo led by influential cocalero leader Evo Morales, have
called for greater government control over the country’s resources, and are frustrated with Mesa’s tempered approach
towards foreign multinational corporations.
In particular, indigenous groups have called for a 50% tax on foreign firms wishing to exploit Bolivia’s natural gas
reserves. However, such demands have been rejected as unworkable by Mesa, who has sought but failed to obtain the
ratification of a progressive but purely business-oriented Hydrocarbons Law that would both expand the government’s role
and foster foreign investment within the natural gas industry.
Between a Rock and a Hard Place
Faced with polarized opposition to his policies, Mesa has been forced to walk a fine line between warring factions while
attempting to resolve the country’s dire economic situation. Although this tenuous balancing act almost failed, and
still could, Bolivia continues to descend into an unending cycle of political in-fighting. “I am not ready to prolong
this shameful comedy we are in,” stated Mesa in his March 6 declaration.
By offering to resign, Mesa astutely gambled his political future on the outcome of last Tuesday’s vote in the Bolivian
Congress. By rejecting his resignation, the president’s mandate and his policy agenda will be strengthened, if only
briefly. As Mesa again seeks to achieve unity through mildly progressive policies, Bolivia’s political stability is once
more teetering on the brink of destruction, largely because modest measures have never brought the social changes the
country so badly needs and which so many Bolivians want.
This analysis was prepared by Mark Scott, COHA Research Fellow.