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Mauricio Funes Installed As El Salvador's First Leftist President

MARCOS ALEMAN   06/ 1/09 11:09 PM ET   AP

El Salvador President

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — A journalist from a party of former Marxist guerrillas became El Salvador's first leftist president Monday, immediately restoring ties with Cuba while promising to remain friendly with the United States.

Mauricio Funes brought to power the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front that fought for 12 years to overthrow U.S.-backed governments until laying down their arms in 1992.

But he sought to ease fears of radicalism by comparing himself to President Barack Obama as well as Brazil's Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, a leftist who has maintained warm ties with leaders across the political spectrum.

"We turned to the strong examples of Obama and Lula as proof that progressive leaders _ instead of being a threat _ can be a new, safe alternative for their people," Funes said in his inaugural address.

Members of his party applauded wildly and shouted the traditional chant of the left in Latin America: "The people united will never be defeated!"

Plucked from outside the party ranks, the bespectacled television journalist won the March 15 elections by helping the movement shed a radical image that alienated many Salvadorans scarred by civil war.

During a bitter electoral campaign, critics branded Funes a communist and compared him to Venezuela's Hugo Chavez and Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega, leaders who delight in denouncing the United States.

Funes avoided meeting Chavez during the campaign, though he said he would maintain respectful relations with him. Chavez canceled plans to attend the inauguration at the last minute and did not state why. Ortega, who also missed the inauguration but came to celebrations in the evening, said Chavez canceled for unspecified security reasons.

Obama sent U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to represent the United States at the inauguration, which she called a testament to the strength of democracy in the Americas.

Funes singled her out in his inaugural speech as a "woman who honors America and radiates the brilliance of the feminine gender throughout the world."

At a joint news conference with Clinton later, Funes said the FMLN was ready to "turn the page" on its troubled past with the United States.

Clinton said the United States wants to improve relations in Latin America, and announced she had invited Funes to Washington to meet with Obama as soon as is convenient for both leaders.

Funes, 49, replaced President Tony Saca, whose staunchly conservative government was one of the most steadfast U.S. allies in the region _ the last to pull its troops from Iraq earlier this year.

But El Salvador will no longer routinely endorse U.S. policies unpopular in the region.

Funes' first act as president was to restore diplomatic relations with Cuba, leaving the United States as the last country in the Western Hemisphere with no formal relations with the communist-governed island. The foreign ministers of both countries signed the agreement at the Salvadoran presidential residence.

On Tuesday, the 34 countries in the Organization of American States meet in Honduras to consider ending Cuba's 50-year-old suspension from the group.

Obama has signaled willingness to ease U.S. hostility toward Cuba, but his administration says it will not support efforts to get Cuba back into the OAS until it makes political changes.

Funes consolidates a leftward shift across Latin America, especially in Central America, where Sandinista leader Ortega returned to Nicaragua's presidency in 2006, two decades after his Sandinista government fought U.S.-backed Contra rebels.

Left-of-center presidents also govern Guatemala and Honduras.

Funes rose to prominence as a TV host outspoken about corruption and he has no governing experience. He inherits an economic recession, widespread gang violence, and a population bitterly polarized over his party's rise to power.

Funes has promised fiscal austerity while raising funds for education and health care by cracking down on tax evasion. He also pledged to create 100,000 jobs in 18 months through infrastructure projects.

He will have to compromise both with more radical members of his party and with the outgoing Arena party, which will have enough seats in the single-house Congress to block key measures such as the budget and foreign debt approvals.

Before his inauguration, Funes visited the grave of Archbishop Oscar Romero, whose 1980 assassination was one of the more shocking events in a civil war between a U.S.-backed government and guerrilla fighters backed by Cuba and the Soviet Union. More than 75,000 people were killed before fighting ended in 1992.

___

Associated Press Writers Matthew Lee and Diego Mendez in San Salvador contributed to this story.

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SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — A journalist from a party of former Marxist guerrillas became El Salvador's first leftist president Monday, immediately restoring ties with Cuba while promising to re...
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — A journalist from a party of former Marxist guerrillas became El Salvador's first leftist president Monday, immediately restoring ties with Cuba while promising to re...
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bbrecht
"pray for the dead, fight like hell for the liv
09:58 AM on 06/03/2009
Bravo El Salvador!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deepfreezevideo
Now with even MORE microbial micro-bio!
10:47 PM on 06/02/2009
This is another paving stone in the groundwork to eliminate the 50 year old Cuban blockade, which I predict will fall entirely before the end of 2010.
By the end of 2010, the United States will have instituted at least limited diplomatic relations with Cuba and will have eliminated all travel restrictions to the island.
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
10:04 PM on 06/02/2009
This must feel as cathartic for the Salvadoreans as the election of Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua. Viva la libertad!
09:23 PM on 06/02/2009
How is it that these leftist and centrist governments have been able to fend off the assaults by the right wing ruling class and right wing media ? The reason that comes to mind are the numerous referendums whereby the people became responsible for their own policies. And then supporters.

Wouldn't it be great if we Americans could vote on -

1. Single payer health care.

2. Defense spending.

3. Military occupations and military bases in foreigh countries.

4. Trade policies

5. Union organizing rights.

6. Tax simplificatin.

7. Ect.
02:48 PM on 06/02/2009
The last paragraph deserves a bit more clarification regarding the role of Oscar Romero.
http://www.victorshepherd.on.ca/Heritage/Oscar%20Romero.htm

...Government forces sent a message to Romero as Rutilio Grande, a Jesuit friend who had struggled to implement Vatican II reforms, was gunned down in his jeep, together with an old man and sixteen year-old boy. Undeterred, Romero prayed publicly at length beside his friend’s remains, and then buried all three corpses without first securing government permission – a criminal offence. Next he did the unthinkable: he excommunicated the murderers. In a dramatic gesture he cancelled all services the following Sunday except for a single mass in front of the cathedral, conducted outdoors before 100,000 people. When he went to Rome to explain himself, the pope replied, “Coraggio – courage.” Courage? Rightwing groups were leafleting the nation, “Be a patriot: kill a priest.”
Four foreign Jesuits were tortured, their ravaged bodies dumped in neighbouring Guatemala . Thousands of people disappeared without trace. In all of this Romero never backed down.

Romero was shot while conducting mass at the funeral of a friend’s mother. His assassin has never been found. 250,000 thronged the Cathedral Square for his funeral. A bomb exploded. Panic-stricken people stampeded. Forty died. In the next two years 35,000 Salvadorans perished. Fifteen per cent of the population was driven into exile. Two thousand simply “disappeared.”
07:44 PM on 06/02/2009
Thank you.
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CigarGod
What is your process?
01:53 PM on 06/02/2009
Crossing my fingers...
12:30 PM on 06/02/2009
I'm glad that El Salvador no longer has the death squad ARENA party represent their government. I'm also glad that EL Salvador's new president won't be captive to the US State Department's backward policies toward Latin America.
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Khirad
01:37 PM on 06/02/2009
In the old days we'd overthrow him in a coup. Good luck, Presidente Funes! El pueblo unido jamás será vencido!
04:56 PM on 06/02/2009
So, you're saying that violently overthrowing democratically elected heads of state and replacing them with US-friendly sadistic dictators isn't a good policy? Aww...
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
11:43 PM on 06/02/2009
You mean like we did in Panama, just to name one of many other countries we supported evil people just because they originally agreed to do our bidding. IE: Saddam, Pinochet, Pol Pot, ect.... yup, we sure can pick em cant we. I say let nature take its course and see what this guy can do.