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And so it begins …

It’s hard to describe the chaos inside the Mexican Congress this morning for Felipe Calderon’s inauguration. I arrived via the garage (after walking about a mile inside the heavily militarized perimeter) and was greeted to the scene of party officials from the left-leaning PRD running like madmen through the halls.

The officials were trying to support their legislators, who were on the congressional floor trying to block the inauguration, but guards wouldn’t let them inside. So they banged and kicked the glass of the locked doors and shouted slogans.

It was a jarring beginning to the day.

Things were even more chaotic and confusing on the floor of the Congress, where lawmakers had been camped out for three days in advance of the inauguration. Things were so tense that any movement sent security guards running up the crowded aisles. At least two fist-fights broke out, with congressmen diving into the melees like they were in a mosh pit at a punk show.

Many of us in the press section, amazed by what was unfolding in front of our eyes, doubted Calderon could pull off the inauguration. But he appeared in a lightning-quick, nearly military operation that lasted just a few minutes. Most of the stage was taken by his fellow party members, and legislators from the PRD never tried to get in Calderon’s way. They did, however, do their best to drown out Calderon with shouts of “Obrador!,” a nod to leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who has formed a shadow government.

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Comments

By dave

December 14, 2006 10:25 AM | Link to this

If you insist on calling the PRD “left-leaning” every time it’s mentioned … it would be appropriate be consistent and call the PAN “Fascist-oriented” every time it’s mentioned. Calderon, after all, did express his support of Franco in an earlier interview and his current policies smack of some Fascistic elements; moreover, the recent controversy over Pinochet in Chile should remind us all that nastiness is found on every extreme of the politics. Not to condemn it is to condone it.