1 / 9

Haiti’s Flawed Election and the Response of the International Community

Haiti’s Flawed Election and the Response of the International Community. Mark Weisbrot Co-Director, Center for Economic and Policy Research February 2011. OAS Report: Serious Flaws, Unsupported Conclusions. Unprecedented to change the outcome of an election without a full recount

rangle
Download Presentation

Haiti’s Flawed Election and the Response of the International Community

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Haiti’s Flawed Election and the Response of the International Community Mark WeisbrotCo-Director, Center for Economic and Policy ResearchFebruary 2011

  2. OAS Report:Serious Flaws, Unsupported Conclusions • Unprecedented to change the outcome of an election without a full recount • Sample size of just 919 tally sheets, out of 11,181 • No statistical inference to estimate what result would be if the remaining 92 percent of tally sheets had been examined • Threw out 234 tally sheets which moved Martelly into second place by 0.3 percentage points • Five times as many tally sheets were simply “never received” by CEP • Six out of seven members were from the US, Canada and France

  3. Haiti’s Fatally Flawed Election • Extremely low participation: 22.8% compared to 59.3% in 2006 • Exclusion of Fanmi Lavalas, polls inaccessible to many IDPs • Over 1300 tally sheets were never received by the CEP or quarantined by the CEP -- equal to 12.2 percent of the total • CEPR conducts full recount – statistical analysis • Found an additional 7.6% of the tally sheets to be irregular • Majority of missing sheets came from areas Celestin did well in • It is impossible to determine who should advance to a second round

  4. Haiti Election Vote Recount (Percent of Registered Voters)

  5. International Threats, Pressure to Accept Flawed Elections and Altered Result • United States, France, Canada all pressure Haitian authorities to accept OAS report • On the other hand, OAS downplays report’s findings as “calculations” and not “results” • US Ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice suggests aid cutoff if Haiti refuses to accept OAS candidate choices • US revokes visas of INITE party leaders, those close to Preval and Celestin • UN Under-Secretary-General Alain Le Roy: “Should the CEP decide otherwise, Haiti may well be faced with a constitutional crisis, with the possibility of considerable unrest and insecurity”

  6. What is Washington Trying to Do? • History: overthrow of Arisitide (1991 and 2004), repression and exclusion of Famni Lavalas • Exclusion of Fanmi Lavalas is key: question could resurface if there were new elections • From Wikileaks cables: Washington pressures Brazil, South Africa to keep Aristide from returning and from influencing Haitian politics from abroad • Return of Duvalier: His head of security is Louis-Jodel Chamblain, long-time U.S. intelligence asset

  7. What is Washington Trying to Do? • OAS/U.S. result: two right-wing candidates will compete in election • Neither will likely prosecute Duvalier; Preval committed to doing so • U.S. far right: committed to right-wing government in Haiti, very influential in Obama State Department • Wikileaks cables show U.S. concern about Preval re/ Haitian foreign relations

  8. Looking Ahead: What Can Be Done to Support Democracy In Haiti • US Congress: Congressional Black Caucus Calls For New Elections; 45 Democrats asked Hillary Clinton for inclusion of all political parties • Other governments in the hemisphere: fiercely resisted U.S. support for coup government in Honduras, still won’t let Honduras back in the OAS • Other governments changed OAS resolution on Haiti so that it would not include endorsement of OAS mission results • Other governments blocked Rio Group (23 Latin American/Caribbean States) from resolution • Pushback inside Haiti: Preval, Celestin, INITE

  9. Conclusion • Haiti will remain ungovernable without legitimate government; legitimate government requires free and fair elections

More Related