28 of 30 - Honduran Presidency
Jun. 28th, 2009 08:01 pm So, apparently, the president of Honduras has been removed. He wanted to hold a referendum on changing the constitution so he could run for another term, but not only does the constitution say he can't have another term, it also says that he can't CHANGE that clause. So the Supreme Court told him he couldn't do that, and the congress told him he couldn't do that, and the military told him he couldn't do that (so he fired the chief of the military, but the Supreme Court reinstated him) ... but he wanted to go ahead with it anyway.
So the Supreme Court authorized the military to remove him and drop him off in Costa Rica. And then following the established rules of succession the head of his party in congress was sworn in (the VP had apparently resigned in 2008).
At least Hugo Chavez says he'll still be his buddy, lol.
So... I'm not sure this is even a coup d'etat, if all three branches of government worked together on it and the Supreme Court of their country thinks it's the way to go. Thoughts?
[Poll #1422630]
Also, compare this to 2005 when the Bolivian congress REJECTED the resignation of the then-President. If I recall correctly the President resigned and so did the VP and the head of congress flatly refused to take the position so the chief justice became the acting president. Silly!
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Date: 2009-06-29 03:36 am (UTC)"Typically, a coup d’état uses the extant government’s power to assume political control of the country. In Coup d'État: A Practical Handbook, military historian Edward Luttwak says: “A coup consists of the infiltration of a small, but critical, segment of the state apparatus, which is then used to displace the government from its control of the remainder”, thus, armed force (either military or paramilitary) is not a defining feature of a coup d’État."
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Coups.
Date: 2009-06-29 03:40 am (UTC)And I'm not saying this is not a coup, which is why "condemnable" is a key word in my poll question. The question at hand is specifically "is this condemnable" or is this legitimate.
...I need to get that coup handbook though :D
Re: Coups.
Date: 2009-06-29 03:47 am (UTC)I don't know a whole lot about Honduran politics or Zelaya in particular, but from what I've read, I think this was a legitimate move. Bear in mind, though, anyone Chavez approves of automatically loses like, sixty thousand points in my book.
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Re: Coups.
Date: 2009-06-29 03:50 am (UTC)I looked at the wikipedia entry before making this entry, it noted that "there wasn't a viable way to impeach the president" ... so I'm not sure what the dealio with that was, because it sounds like if it was just a 2/3rds of senate thing they'd have had it -- sounds like he wasn't too popular with the congress and all.
A condemnable coup d'etat!
Date: 2009-06-29 06:03 pm (UTC)Costa Rica
no subject
Date: 2009-06-30 01:14 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-30 01:37 am (UTC)It sounds like that's really exactly what the army did in this case. They're tasked with safeguarding the elections materials, so the first stage of this was the president demanding they bring them out. The military refused, so he sacked the head of the military. Then the Supreme Court said no the military was right and reinstated him. So it sounds like the other bodies of government did exactly what they were supposed to.
Then the president proceeded to where the military was keeping the elections materials, backed by national police and crowds of supporters, and took possession of the material. So...