evo 101: The Proverbial Cowardice of Evo | La proverbial cobardía de Evo

By Alfonso Gumucio Dagron, Brujula DIgital:

The cowardice of Evo Morales is well known. In 2019, he sought help from the Mexican government to escape Bolivia immediately after swiftly ousting the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, nullifying the general elections, and resigning as president of Bolivia. He later declared it was a “coup”…

A meticulous chronology suggests that the plane sent by López Obrador had already departed Mexico when Morales resigned. He couldn’t even stay a couple of days in the no man’s land of Chapare, where he acts as the supreme chief and lives in refuge because he can’t even take a commercial flight without being insulted by people.

His proverbial cowardice was evident again on Wednesday, July 10, when he threw a tantrum at the meeting of political leaders invited by the Supreme Electoral Tribunal to find solutions to the disrupted schedule of primary, judicial, and general elections. With overwhelming logic, the majority agreed that primary elections were a waste of money and risked postponing judicial elections and thus the 2025 general elections.

When Evo Morales realized he was in a clear minority, he upset the applecart (he was always a sore loser, remember the knee in a soccer game) and stormed out of the room with his tail between his legs, only to declare at a press conference later: “they beat us, I recognize, I respect,” as if it had been a soccer game he played every day when he was president. This once again exposed his incapacity and cowardice for dialogue, the same he showed during his 15 years in presidency, never accepting a debate with other candidates. He doesn’t know how to speak civilly, only knows how to give orders and slogans.

His sole objective at the meeting with the TSE was to add point 13 (an unlucky number) to the Multi-Party Meeting agreement: his indefinite tenure as president of the Movement for Socialism (MAS), meaning his own survival as a leader. Obviously, no one accepted special rules for the Chaparean autocrat. The panic he feels at the idea of losing power and the privileges that come with his position as a political leader were evident in the statement he made afterwards to the media, where he appeared uncomfortable, trembling, and stumbling over his words. His usual cronies (his lawyer and former ministers) were not with him, presumably to avoid further embarrassment.

Morales fears being replaced at the helm of MAS, just as throughout his 15 years in power he did not give up the presidency of the six coca-grower federations in the tropics of Cochabamba, despite constituting a flagrant case of conflict of interest (which was not challenged by any of the submissive electoral tribunals that served him, nor by the servile Judiciary, nor by the Legislative power where he had a majority). The truth is that the hero of Orinoca fears the so-called “social movements” (raise crows and they’ll pluck out your eyes…), which he himself created to dismantle and annihilate the historic labor movement (COB, FSTMB, etc.), and he also distrusts the young MAS leaders who are poised to sideline him.

And since we’re talking about these young MAS members, something that caught my attention when he stood up and abruptly left the Multi-Party Meeting at the TSE, is that behind him like a lapdog came Senator Andrónico Gutiérrez, whom many MAS members see as Evo Morales’ generational replacement.

This Andrónico (far from being the “victorious man” of the Greeks) does not seem to realize that he was not invited to that meeting as Evo’s sidekick, but as the President of the Senate. His responsibility in the Multi-Party Meeting was to represent all senators, not to act as Evo Morales’ lapdog. With this misstep, Andrónico demonstrated that his political future is as precarious as that of his boss. Neither of them knows how to distinguish between a State function and their party affiliation.

It occurs to me that Evo should be given a chance to show his courage and learn to tie his own shoes. Since he is not satisfied with the agreement reached at the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, I suggest he declare a hunger strike at the doors of the TSE, but let it be a dry hunger strike and to the bitter end, without backing down. I would support this brave decision, as would the majority of the Bolivian people, including his closest followers, for whom the Chapare chief has become a burdensome load to bear.

@AlfonsoGumucio is a writer and filmmaker

Leave a comment