In “La Traicion” (“The Betrayal”), losing 2006 PRI presidential candidate Roberto Madrazo blames then-president Ernesto Zedillo (image) of spearheading the plan in 1994 which called for clandestinely alternating the presidency between the PRI and Fox’s National Action Party (PAN, in Spanish).
So far, Zedillo has yet to publicly respond to Madrazo’s accusations despite being long time political rivals. However, losing 2000 PRI presidential candidate Francisco Labastida denied Madrazo’s charges.
Zedillo’s name has been in the news lately as a possible successor to embattled World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz; Foreign Policy magazine editor Moises Naim brought up that possibility in an editorial published in Sunday’s
Links (Spanish)- Revoluciones, El Tiempo, Periódico AM, Milenio
Links (English)-
Image- Televisa
Madrazo was part of this plot to give the 'dedazo' and presidency of 2000 to Fox. In fact, it was certainly mandated from The North with Clinton's economic bailout of Mexico.
ReplyDeleteWhat he's really ticked off about is that the plan to alternate went awry, and he didn't get the presidency he thought promised to him in 2006. And neither did the PRI.
Some times the best plans just don't work out and then you just have to write about treason and betrayal. Funny and sad both. But what's a rat to expect?
I'm sure Madrazo's publicists are already working to get the book air time on Lopez Obrador's late night talk show....
ReplyDeleteMadrazo definitely has a bone to pick with Zedillo and the PRI leaders. But what if his allegations are true? Would Mexico enter into a maelstrom of controversy or will it all blow over?
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