"I don't vote for bosses," wrote a worker on
one of the ballots which the oppressor class gives
us to elect the person who will administer the
capitalist system for the next five years.
For more than two years, the electoral politicians
bombarded us with all their alienating apparatus
to choose between them which one can
"do it better." But what is best for the workers is
the organization to struggle for communism.
With a whole campaign to make it easier to
vote, with campaigns to motivate people to go to
the polls and with the electoral parties filling you
with promises, they expected greater participation
in these elections. However, these elections
had fewer voters than the two previous Presidential
elections.
The masses are waking up, rejecting the false
hopes and promises of the candidates. They open
their eyes and see how history teaches us that
elections are not the solution. They are the oxygen
of a system that is in a coma.
The day came, 2.6 million went to the voting
stations, between traps and strategies, fights between
class brothers dressed in different colors
while their candidates hug, laugh and talk like
great friends. The bosses' mass media, vomiting
a string of illusions and lies, also spent the day
like this. Once again, the circus performed its
function.
After the voting ended, all were waiting to find
out the final result. The question was whether at
the end, one of the three would win in the first
round or whether there would be a second round.
The ballots were counted. The circus does not
end. It won't end until we abolish it. Elections are
one of the tools of capitalism to survive its crisis.
The struggle for communism is the only option
for the working class. In communism there will
not be elections. The leaders of the working class
will win this position by fighting every day for
the collective wellbeing of the class, not with
propaganda.
As they reached 100% of the votes counted,
some celebrated and others protested, until finally
it was decided: there will be a runoff. The
FMLN, the party of the "left" won 48.93% while
the party of the right, ARENA, won 38.95%.
It is important to mention that the party that
forced the second round is that of the ex-President
Tony Saca, who won in 2004 as a candidate
of ARENA. Now this fascist launched his candidacy
with the movement Unity. He won 11.44%
of the votes. Since none won more than 50%, in
a month, the circus will return to reopen its doors.
The FMLN and Unity officially expressed
their interest in working together to achieve an
electoral victory. The FMLN will make an alliance
with Tony Saca, showing that there is no
honor among capitalists and thieves.
Gone are the reform struggles of the FMLN
against NAFTA, the anti-terrorist law, the superstrong
hand and the sending of soldiers to Iraq.
Now we "must unite for a better El Salvador"
when in reality they think "If to win I must ally
with the devil, I will do it."
Five years ago we said it, and today we repeat
it: the FMLN does not represent
the working class. They
represent the interests of a
non-traditional capitalist economic
power in the country.
The FMLN, with more chance
of winning the Presidency, affirms
increasingly that they are
the new chosen ones of the
capitalist system.
This is not a process from
one or two years ago. It is the
result of a reformist, revisionist
line. They wanted to make people
believe that they would
enter the system "to transform
it."
The capitalist system cannot
be reformed or transformed, it
must be destroyed. Our goal
must be that all the workers
who vote and those who do not
vote join ICWP to build a communist
revolution.
"ANOTHER SIMULATION OF
DEMOCRACY"
EL SALVADOR—On February 2, there was
another simulation of capitalist "democracy;"
the results, a second round, while the masses
swallow so much hypocrisy, so many lies, so
much Hollywood-style spectacle: lights, noise,
marketing, nothing left behind. All of this while
we're organizing, mobilizing, and struggling for
communism.
Here it's a debate between fascist politicians.
Here it's changes that won't change anything.
Two parties, you could say, traditionally, one
from the right and the other from the left—but
it's not really like that. Here there are only parties
of the right which hope to take advantage
of the privileges of the system on the backs of
the real interests of the working class. It's true,
like they say, "the left is anticapitalist or it's nothing,"
and "those who aren't against capital are
in favor of it." Just like all over the world, the
parties of the left bourgeoisie are supporting
the capitalist system, private property, and exploitation
of labor. We mustn't let ourselves be
fooled.
It's funny that once again, in spite of an increase
in the number of people voting from one
farce to the next—oops! I meant to say from
one election to the next—it's always 53%,
without counting the blank ballots. The majority
of workers are indifferent to these simulations;
they have lost confidence in politicians and in
the system—a system which at the same time
teaches them about reality through its own
greed. Maybe because it's the same promises
in every election, but with different disguises so
that our poverty is not so obvious.
Although the world seems to be falling apart
before our very eyes, and maybe it will if we
don't do anything, the future and its generations
expect more from us than passive complaints
that keep us from dreaming or talking
about revolutions. That doesn't mean that we're
not doing it; we're communists, comrades.
We're closer than we think to ending the capitalist
system, from the hour that the workers
will realize that capitalist elections only take us
to a death without hope. Everything will change
when the working class, united, goes to the
streets to make revolution.
"The working class doesn't vote; it organizes
and fights for Communism."
Until Victory!
--Comrade in El Salvador
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