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Viewing cable 09MEXICO3199, ESPARZA'S LAST STAND? NATIONAL STRIKE LIKELY TO FAIL

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09MEXICO3199 2009-11-10 16:40 2011-08-26 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Mexico
VZCZCXRO4695
PP RUEHCD RUEHGD RUEHHO RUEHMC RUEHNG RUEHNL RUEHRD RUEHRS RUEHTM
DE RUEHME #3199/01 3141640
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 101640Z NOV 09
FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 8971
INFO RUEHXC/ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHINGTON DC
RHMFISS/DEPT OF ENERGY WASHINGTON DC
RHMFIUU/HQS USNORTHCOM
RHEHAAA/NSC WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 MEXICO 003199 
 
SENSITIVE, SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR WHA/MEX, WHA/EPSC, EB/IFD/OMA, AND DRL/AWH 
STATE PASS TO DOL ILAB CRISPIN RIGBY 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: ECON ELAB PREL PGOV MX
SUBJECT: ESPARZA'S LAST STAND? NATIONAL STRIKE LIKELY TO FAIL 
 
A: Mexico 2865 
B. Mexico 2933 
C. Mexico 2978 
 
1. (SBU) Summary: The battle between the Sindicato Mexicano de 
Electricistas (SME) and the federal government over the shut-down of 
Mexican electricity company, Luz y Fuerza del Centro (LFC), is 
dwindling in Mexico City. Former SME leader, Martin Esparza, is 
mobilizing as many allies and arguments as he can to remain a viable 
opponent, while Secretary of Labor Javier Lozano and other cabinet 
Secretaries wage a strong public relations campaign and use their 
considerable resources to counter the claims of the union. The SME 
continues to organize protests and rally social and union groups to 
its cause, but as the crowds are shrinking, so is SME's ability to 
meaningfully galvanize public opinion. End summary. 
 
Calls for a National Strike 
--------------------------- 
2. (SBU) The SME has called for a national strike to take place in 
mid-November. News reports indicate that the remaining SME workers 
and other radical groups - especially university students - are 
calling urgently for the strike and that Esparza is working to hold 
them back. He apparently needs more time to get participating 
parties organized and to allow for the democratic process of voting 
within unions on whether or not to strike. Laboff contacts dismiss 
Esparza's calls for the strike completely: he is losing ground fast 
and no longer even counts on the entire workforce of the LFC for 
support. The so-called radical and independent unions and social 
groups that do support him, however, are facilitating the 
organization of the strike. While a major strike is unlikely, 
November could be unsettling for Mexico City. Still, the GOM has 
handled this issue quite well, and the repercussions for Mexico's 
competitiveness agenda could be significant should it emerge 
victorious. 
 
Radical Cohesion 
---------------- 
3. (SBU) In late October Esparza and his allies formed a new united 
front against perceived government aggression called the National 
Assembly of Popular Resistance (ANRP). The ANRP counts around 100 
social and union groups and is trying to create a Mexico-wide 
footprint to enable its national strike. The second ANRP meeting 
took place on November 5 and participants determined to begin a 
series of peaceful and civic activities to build up to the national 
strike planned for November 11. Initially the strike planning 
meeting was planned for October 31 and the strike for November 5, 
but the SME has pushed both back. Esparza claims this is to give 
supporters the opportunity to organize their participation, but 
detractors claim that Esparza is struggling to unify a critical 
mass. Likely participants will be university groups, peasant and 
rural worker groups, and dissident unions: the Coordinadora Nacional 
de Trabajadores de Educacion (CNTE), the unions of telephone 
workers, tramway workers, and the nuclear industry. November 5 and 
11 are significant dates because they mark the one-month anniversary 
since Lozano denied Esparza the "toma de nota" and since Calderon 
shut down LFC. In addition to the major protest march planned for 
November 11, the SME and its supporters plan to peacefully and 
symbolically retake the LFC buildings on or before the date of the 
march. Esparza is also calling for former LFC clients to not pay 
their CFE bills and for all of Mexico City to turn off the lights on 
November 11 from 7.30 - 9.30 PM. SME members and their sympathizers 
began to hang red and black flags from buildings in the evening on 
November 5 while union and social group leaders organized committees 
for the November 11 strike. Early reports suggest that the ANRP will 
block roads and close federal buildings and tollbooths in certain 
areas of the city. 
 
4. (SBU) In addition to social and union groups, the SME receives 
considerable support from the Partido Revolucionario Democratico 
(PRD) and the other leftist parties. PRD deputies in the Distrito 
Federal legislature and UAM students donated more than 250,000 pesos 
to the SME protest movement on November 5. Support from the PRD may 
lose value for Esparza, however, in light of the PRD's recent 
midterm political losses, mostly to the Partido Revolucionario 
Institucional (PRI). The role of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (AMLO), 
once believed critical to the SME's sustained protest, has waned 
recently. During the protest on October 15, AMLO did not join the 
main speakers on the podium for speeches but instead brought up the 
rear of the march. It is unclear whether he chose that role because 
he believes the SME protest is doomed and wants some political 
distance from it or if Esparza sees AMLO as a fading star and 
relegated him to the back. 
 
Splintering Internal Support 
------------------------------------ 
5. (SBU) Esparza has a growing need for other unions to support his 
 
MEXICO 00003199  002 OF 003 
 
 
cause as former SME members are increasingly accepting the 
government's severance package. As of November 3, more than 19,700 
workers (44% of the 44,500 former employees) had accepted their 
severance packages. Workers have until November 14 to accept the 
severance arranged by the government. These packages are valued at 
between 10 and 80% more than the legal requirements, depending on 
the seniority of the worker, and provide, on average, 2.5 years of 
support. Additionally, nearly 6,500 former LFC employees have 
expressed interest in working for the Comision Federal de 
Electricidad. 
 
6. (SBU) On October 26, Alejandro Muoz, Esparza's opponent in the 
SME's June elections, offered to reopen negotiations with the 
federal government. He accepts that the government will not rescind 
the decree and asks only to be allowed to improve the severance 
package for LFC employees. Negotiations between the Secretary of 
Government (Segob)and Muoz over the expanded package are underway, 
and the government has accepted early retirement for about 1,500 
workers. Munoz and Segob are now struggling over the re-employment 
of LFC workers in CFE. Esparza continues to deny Muoz' right to 
speak on behalf of the SME, and Esparza supporters have accused 
Munoz of stealing 23 million pesos from the SME. According to Munoz, 
the money is in the SME bank account and can only be withdrawn by 
the General Secretary and the Treasurer. Given that the SME has no 
General Secretary since Esparza was denied official recognition, the 
money cannot be withdrawn. Munoz is also working with Segob on how 
to properly redistribute the SME funds frozen since October. 
 
Legal Issues and Constitutional Questions 
----------------------------------------- 
7. (SBU) Esparza announced on November 2 that the SME will present 
two constitutional challenges before Mexico's Supreme Court. PRD 
legislators say the challenges will be based on the constitution's 
articles defining electricity and oil as property of the nation, 
though previous reports focused on workers' rights. The GOM has not 
responded except to say that it has no doubt of the legality and 
constitutionality of its act. Civilian supporters of the dissolution 
told Laboff that since LFC was formed by decree and was a 
decentralized institution, the president has every right to dissolve 
it by decree. One Laboff contact explained that, based on precedents 
set in the private sector, the legality is probably not an issue. 
Moreover, the government planned its move carefully and certainly 
studied the legal basis for its action. The legislative committee to 
investigate the constitutional complaint in the Chamber of Deputies 
has been disbanded and the issue will be addressed in full session 
on November 6. 
 
8. (SBU) Pending decisions in the Legislature, the SME had also 
launched several efforts to block the dissolution of LFC and the SME 
in Mexico's courts. November 6 brought the first SME defeat when a 
judge ruled that workers could not sue to get their jobs back since 
the company no longer exists. Unless the decree ending LFC is 
reversed, workers have no company to work for and therefore no basis 
for lawsuits. Several other cases are pending addressing possible 
legal ways to stop the process of dissolving LFC. There is some 
reason for concern that as legal and civic possibilities for protest 
fade, the SME and its supporters will become increasingly radical 
and violent. Already protesters have had a minor clash with police 
in Hidalgo in Esparza's home town, prompting the GOM to request that 
everybody concerned respect the rights of expression of both sides. 
 
 
Seeds of Truth in Workers' Rights Violations 
-------------------------------------------- 
9. (SBU) Lost in the political and personal drama of this issue is 
the seed of truth about workers' rights. International Labor 
Organization (ILO) conventions protect workers' rights to freedom of 
association, and the legally required GOM certification of the union 
elections, the "toma de nota," is a solid means of government 
control on who leads which unions. Although both the miners' strike 
and the electricians' case are vastly more complicated, both are 
directly affected by the "toma de nota" issue. Much of the sympathy 
for the SME in Mexico and around the world comes from the violation 
of workers' rights to organize and function independently of the 
government, and many international unions, including some from the 
U.S., have expressed their solidarity based on this issue alone. For 
many of the international supporters, the issues of corruption and 
abuse among union leaders are lost in the question of union 
autonomy. 
 
10. (SBU) Comment: The problem of inappropriate government control 
of union activities and officers should not be dismissed even though 
the leaders and activities of the SME and many of its current allies 
are questionable. Esparza's likely failure in his quest for a 
national strike will hopefully end the resistance movement and allow 
the LFC workers to accept their severance pay and return to gainful 
 
MEXICO 00003199  003 OF 003 
 
 
employment. The government has a lot to gain by allowing Esparza to 
exit gracefully after his fight: if other unions are confronted in 
the future, the government could save itself some unrest if the 
union leaders know that they will be looked after. Given Esparza's 
tenacity to date, it is hard to say how this issue will end. In 
spite of the SME's continued agitation and its position at the head 
of a radical front, its popular support is diminishing. End 
comment.