More on Mexico
There are sometimes, close elections in democracies: EU observers, at the very least, detected no signs of improprieties in the Mexican contest. One wonders if, a few months back, the United States similarly should have avoided recognizing Romano Prodi after his razor-thin victory over Silvio Berlusconi. The reactions (and political temperaments) of Berlusconi and López Obrador seem quite alike. Both have strong authoritarian streaks; both seem to have preferred making unsubstantiated allegations of voter fraud to accepting legitimate, if heartbreakingly narrow, defeats. But somehow I doubt that Grandin was in Berlusconi's camp a few months back.
Moreover, some might consider it a vestige of imperialism for the United States to demand that Mexico ignore its own electoral code (which allows retabulation of reported vote totals by the nonpartisan electoral commission, but forbids opening the ballot boxes to recount the ballots unless the challengers can demonstrate an impropriety) and simply push ahead with López Obrador's demand for a recount of all ballots.
The bulk of Grandin's essay, in any event, involves not the election but an anti-globalization critique of NAFTA, which he sees as disastrous for Mexican agriculture. He faults NAFTA for not delivering the"prosperity its advocates promised" (since the adoption of NAFTA, Mexico's exports nearly doubled as a percent of GDP, from 16.8 percent to 29.9 percent, from 1994-2005). Grandin calls for the Bush administration to renegotiate NAFTA on terms more favorable to Mexico, apparently to allow Mexico to set tariffs on agricultural imports at whatever level it desires. Whether or not this concept makes sense economically (while Mexico's economy clearly isn't robust, it's hard to see how protectionism will help it revive), the recommendation is wildly unrealistic from a political standpoint.
The Mexican election, as Oscar recently noted, poses a lot of challenging questions for Americans. The Times could do better in trying to inform its readers about these issues than it did today.