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Wikipedia

Carlos Mesa

Carlos Diego de Mesa Gisbert[b] (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈkaɾlos ˈðjeɣo ˈmesa xisˈβeɾt] ; born 12 August 1953) is a Bolivian historian, journalist, and politician who served as the 63rd president of Bolivia from 2003 to 2005. As an independent politician, he previously served as the 37th vice president of Bolivia from 2002 to 2003 under Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada and was the international spokesman for Bolivia's lawsuit against Chile in the International Court of Justice from 2014 to 2018. A member of the Revolutionary Left Front, he has served as leader of Civic Community, the largest opposition parliamentary group in Bolivia, since 2018.

Carlos Mesa
Official portrait, 2004
63rd President of Bolivia
In office
17 October 2003 – 9 June 2005
Vice PresidentVacant
Preceded byGonzalo Sánchez de Lozada
Succeeded byEduardo Rodríguez Veltzé
37th Vice President of Bolivia
In office
6 August 2002 – 17 October 2003
PresidentGonzalo Sánchez de Lozada
Preceded byJorge Quiroga
Succeeded byÁlvaro García Linera
Leader of Civic Community
Assumed office
13 November 2018
Preceded byAlliance established
Official Representative of Bolivia
for the Maritime Claim
In office
28 April 2014 – 1 October 2018[a]
PresidentEvo Morales
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition dissolved
Personal details
Born
Carlos Diego de Mesa Gisbert

(1953-08-12) 12 August 1953 (age 70)
La Paz, Bolivia
Political partyRevolutionary Left Front (2018–present)
Other political
affiliations
Independent (before 2018)
Spouses
Patricia Flores Soto
(m. 1975; div. 1978)
Elvira Salinas Gamarra
(m. 1980)
Children
  • Borja Ignacio
  • Guiomar
Parents
Education
Alma mater
Occupation
  • Historian
  • journalist
  • politician
AwardsList of awards and honors
Signature
Website
  • carlosdmesa.com
  • bibliotecavirtualcarlosdmesa.com

Born in La Paz, Mesa began a twenty-three-year-long journalistic career after graduating from university. He rose to national fame in 1983 as the host of De Cerca, in which he interviewed prominent figures of Bolivian political and cultural life. His popular appeal led former president Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada of the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR) to invite him to be his running mate in the 2002 presidential election. Though Mesa's moderate left-wing sympathies contrasted with centre-right policies of the MNR, he accepted the offer, running as an independent in a hotly contested electoral campaign. The Sánchez de Lozada-Mesa ticket won the election, and, on 6 August, Mesa took charge of a largely ceremonial office that carried with it few formal powers save for guaranteeing the constitutional line of succession. Shortly into his term, conflict between Sánchez de Lozada and Mesa arose. By October 2003, the increasingly tense situation surrounding the ongoing gas conflict caused a definitive break in relations between the president and vice president, leading the latter to announce his withdrawal from government after clashes between protesters and military personnel led to several deaths. Crucially, Mesa opted not to resign from his vice-presidential post and succeeded to the presidency upon Sánchez de Lozada's resignation.

Mesa assumed office with broadly popular civic support but leading a government without a party base and devoid of organic parliamentary support left him with little room to maneuver as his public policy proposals were severely restricted by the legislature—controlled by traditional parties and increasingly organized regional and social movements spearheaded by the cocalero activist and future president Evo Morales. As promised, he held a national referendum on gas which passed with high margins on all five counts. Nonetheless, widespread dissatisfaction resurged, and his call for a binding referendum on autonomies and the convocation of a constituent assembly to reform the Constitution failed to quell unrest. Mesa resigned in June 2005, though not before ensuring that the heads of the two legislative chambers renounced their succession rights, facilitating the assumption of the non-partisan Supreme Court judge Eduardo Rodríguez Veltzé to the presidency. With that, Mesa withdrew from active politics and returned his focus to various media projects and journalistic endeavors. In 2014, despite previous animosity, President Evo Morales appointed him as the international spokesman for the country's maritime lawsuit against Chile before the International Court of Justice (ICJ), a position he held until the final ruling at The Hague in 2018.

Mesa's work for the maritime cause propelled him back into the national consciousness, and he soon emerged as a viable alternative to Morales as a contender for the presidency, even surpassing the president in electoral preference polls. Shortly after the ruling by the ICJ, Mesa announced his presidential candidacy. In the 2019 election, Mesa was defeated by Morales, who failed to garner a majority but won a wide enough plurality to avoid a runoff. However, irregularities in the preliminary vote tally prompted Mesa to denounce electoral fraud and call for mass demonstrations, ultimately ending in Morales' resignation and an ensuing political crisis. The following year, snap elections were held, but numerous postponements and an unpopular transitional government hampered Mesa's campaign, resulting in a first-round loss to Movement for Socialism (MAS) candidate Luis Arce. Mesa emerged from the election as the head of the largest opposition bloc in a legislature that does not hold a MAS supermajority for the first time in over a decade.

Early life and career edit

Early life and education edit

 
Mesa with his family in 1965.

Carlos Mesa was born on 12 August 1953 in La Paz.[3] Through his father, José de Mesa, he is of Spanish descent; his grandfather, José Mesa Sánchez, emigrated to Bolivia from Alcalá la Real in 1910. Due to his heritage, in 2005, the city's council unanimously designated Mesa as the adoptive son of the municipality.[4] His mother, Teresa Gisbert, was of Catalan descent; her father and mother emigrated from Barcelona and Alicante.[5] Together, de Mesa and Gisbert were two of the most prominent Bolivian architects, historians, and museologists of their time.[6] He has three younger siblings: Andrés, Isabel, and Teresa Guiomar.[7]

Between 1959 and 1970, Mesa completed primary and began secondary studies at the all-boys private Catholic and Jesuit San Calixto School in the Següencoma barrio of La Paz.[8] In 1970, he traveled abroad to Spain, completing his high school education at the San Estanislao de Kotska School in Madrid. After graduating, Mesa entered the Complutense University of Madrid, pursuing majors in political science and letters. After three years, he returned to Bolivia, where he enrolled in the Higher University of San Andrés (UMSA), graduating with a degree in literature in 1978.[9] During his stay there, in 1974, he directed the UMSA's Faculty of Humanities magazine.[10]

 
Mesa, aged 18, as a student at the Complutense University of Madrid.

At the age of twenty-two, Mesa married Patricia Flores Soto, though they divorced three years later. Two years after that, on 28 March 1980, he married Elvira Salinas Gamarra, a psychologist and environmental consultant with whom he has two children: Borja Ignacio and Guiomar.[11]

Journalistic career edit

Film critic and archivist edit

On 12 July 1976, while still a student of the UMSA, Mesa, along with Pedro Susz and Amalia de Gallardo, helped found the Bolivian Cinematheque. With the support of Renzo Cotta of the Center of Cinematographic Orientation and La Paz Mayor Mario Mercado, the group secured a small amount of space on the fifth floor of the La Paz House of Culture in order to start their film archive. The first addition to the collection was a short film directed by Jorge Ruiz Laredo about the violinist Jaime Laredo, which was donated by the pianist Raúl Barragán.[12] Along with Susz, Mesa served as the cinematheque's executive director from its foundation until 1985, remaining a member of its board of directors after that.[10]

Radio host and producer edit

Mesa's first foray into radio occurred in 1969, concomitantly his first journalistic endeavor. Through his father, he secured a three-month internship for Radio Universo, where he would haul portable tape recorders to ministerial press conferences before returning and cutting the recorded material for broadcast use. In 1974, with the help of Universo head Lorenzo Carri, Mesa became the independent producer and host of a program on Radio Méndez. After a brief return to Universo in 1976, Mesa moved on to Radio Metropolitana, where, together with Roberto Melogno, he produced the morning newscast 25 Minutos en el Mundo. In 1979, Mesa's meager cinematheque salary pushed him to seek more dedicated journalistic work. Together with Carri, he joined Radio Cristal, owned by Mario Castro. The pair's presentational style evolved from simple news coverage to commentary and analysis and, finally, opinion journalism. Abruptly shuttered by the military government of Luis García Meza, the station was reopened after his fall and, between 1982 and 1985, had grown to become the country's top news network.[13]

Television presenter edit

After a brief stint as sub-director of the evening periodical Última Hora between 1982 and 1983, Mesa made his first television debut. In that period, the only major competition to state outlets came from university television. Channel 13 Televisión Universitaria (TVU), directed by Luis González Quintanilla, played a particularly important role in the country's political process. In 1982, amid the country's democratic transition and the reopening of independent media, González invited Mesa to a panel on one of TVU's programs. Impressed by the young journalist, González called on him to take charge of a culture-themed talk show. Though Diálogos en Vivo ran for only three months, it proved to be the basis for what later became the program that spotlighted Mesa as a national television personality.[14]

The name of that program came to be known as De Cerca. The concept of the show—formulated by Bolivian National Television officials Julio Barragán and Carlos Soria—combined formal interviews of Bolivian political figures with a section in which recorded questions from ordinary citizens were relayed by the host to the guest. In mid-1983, Mesa was called on to host the show, an offer he "accepted without question". De Cerca premiered on 15 September 1983, with Minister of Planning Roberto Jordan Pando as its first guest. The show premiered at a time of a severe hyperinflation crisis in the country; Mesa's salary frequently spent long periods through the bureaucracy of the Ministry of Finance, often being delivered two or three months late. His final payment from the company, delivered in July 1985, totaled b$63.5 million due to inflation.[15]

Save for the eventual removal of prerecorded questions, which Mesa stated "broke the continuity of the program, and also limited the topic of the conversation to excessively circumstantial issues", the style and presentation of De Cerca remained largely unchanged for two decades and between four channels, lending it a sense of "permanence in time". Throughout its run, the program spotlighted a large majority of the most relevant political actors of the period; to be invited onto the show eventually became a mark of national prominence. Of those interviewed included every president of the country who governed during the show's run, as well as some prior ones, with the exception of Víctor Paz Estenssoro and Hernán Siles Zuazo, neither of whom, with few exceptions, ever accepted invitations to any television program. For Mesa, the omission of these two figures was "a great void in De Cerca that I will never finish regretting".[16]

Foundation of PAT edit
 
Mesa discusses his book Soliloquio del Conquistador at the Miami Book Fair, 2014.

On 1 August 1990, Mesa, together with fellow journalists Mario Espinoza and Amalia Pando and financially assisted by Ximena Valdivia, launched Associated Journalists Television (Periodistas Asociados Televisión; PAT). The concept of the network, then an audiovisual production company, came from the hope of establishing a newscast free of government oversight and censors. Starting from 15 September, PAT began broadcasting public news coverage to the country. In 1992, the government of Jaime Paz Zamora closed the State television company in favor of a contract with PAT, ratified by the succeeding government of Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada. Despite the State's financial support, Mesa's team of journalists took great care to maintain a level of objectivity in their reporting. Responding to questions regarding bias, Pando admits that both she and Mesa supported many of the policies of Sánchez de Lozada's first term but rejects the notion that this constituted "a tie" to the government.[c]

Despite its early success, a compounding set of issues began to mount onto the channel. Viewing the newscast as an outlet for the opposition, the government of Hugo Banzer initiated a boycott. This, coupled with an economic recession and a series of well-done but largely unpopular new programs, sent PAT into a financial crisis. According to Pando, Mesa's vice-presidential candidacy had "devastating consequences" for the channel's credibility as an independent news source. In 2007, the company was sold to businessman Abdallah Daher, who thereafter sold it to Comercializadora Multimedia del Sur. Only the name remains with the original channel.[17]

Press columnist edit

Mesa's longest-held editorial post was as a regular contributor to the sports supplements of the morning papers Hoy, Presencia, Viva, and La Prensa; he published for these outlets between 1976 and 2002. Between 1979 and 1986, he worked as a film critic for the La Paz prints Apertura (1979), Hoy (1981–1982), and Última Hora (1983–1986). From 2010 to 2017, he remained a regular editor-at-large for the morning newspapers El Deber, El Nuevo Sur, El Potosí, Correo del Sur, La Palabra, La Patria, Los Tiempos, Página Siete, and Sol de Pando. In addition, Mesa has written columns for international outlets such as the Spanish Diario 16 and El País, the American Foreign Policy, and Germany's Der Spiegel.[10]

Vice presidency (2002–2003) edit

Entry into politics edit

As a prominent journalist in the field of politics, the prospect of actually participating in affairs of state was an option often proposed by outside voices but which Mesa—a staunch independent despite his moderate left-wing sympathies—routinely refused to consider. His first experience refusing the call to serve came in 1986 when President Paz Estenssoro invited him to be a component of his cabinet as minister of information. Despite his stated admiration of the president, Mesa declined the offer the following day, citing his perceived inadequacy to hold the position. In the ensuing years, on various occasions, Mesa declined offers by various parties to run for vice president, mayor of La Paz, or senator. In the 1993 election, then-candidate Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada had placed Mesa on a list of pre-candidates for the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR)'s vice-presidential nomination. The Aymara activist Víctor Hugo Cárdenas was ultimately chosen and elected as the country's first indigenous vice president.[18]

From no to yes: Mesa accepts edit

 
Mesa served as vice president under Gonzálo Sánchez de Lozada but broke with him after the government repressions of October 2003.

With elections set for June 2002, the possibility of being presented as a political candidate was once again laid on Mesa. Seeking a turnaround after its electoral defeat in the 1997 general election, the MNR opted to renominate its national chief, ex-president Sánchez de Lozada, as the party's presidential candidate. For his new bid, Sánchez de Lozada surrounded his campaign with American political consultants of the Greenberg Carville Shrum (GCS) strategy group, who employed focus groups and public opinion polls to revitalize his public image.[19] In January, Mesa received a call from the ex-president asking him to meet with members of the GCS team to discuss the results of a recent poll. Mesa's suspicions that the subject of the survey would regard political candidates were confirmed when two consultants—Jeremy Rosner and Amy Webber—met him at his office at PAT, presenting the journalist with results showing him with the highest favorability among a list of a dozen national figures.[20]

For Mesa, the festering social conflicts of twenty-first-century Bolivia necessitated a political renewal: "Paz Zamora and Sánchez de Lozada were history, their political cycle had finished, and they were prolonging it artificially and unnecessarily". If he were to become a contestant in electoral politics, he reasoned, it would be under a movement of his own design and certainly not as vice president, a post he described as "the stupidest position of all ... An office with a single objective, that of succession, with few clear powers". In meetings with Sánchez de Lozada, Mesa expressed this point, emphasizing that the MNR required younger generations among its ranks and suggesting himself as a possible alternative presidential candidate, an idea that the MNR shot down due to his political and economic inexperience.[21]

Among other considerations for Mesa were the notion of ending an almost twenty-five-year career in journalism—including the abandonment of PAT—and the perceived adverse effects assuming the vice presidency would have on his family. For these reasons, on 31 January, Mesa informed Sánchez de Lozada that he would not join the ex-president as his running mate. Two days later, however, Mesa was called to one last meeting with Carlos Sánchez Berzaín, the MNR's campaign manager, who outlined three final arguments for consideration: Sánchez de Lozada was the only candidate with the capacity to alleviate the ongoing economic crisis; Mesa could not continue in his comfortable position commentating on the sidelines of politics; the MNR's campaign team considered the inclusion or exclusion of Mesa as the deciding factor in the party's electoral outcome. It was either "with me or with me ... [and] everything else was a disaster". These points renewed doubts in Mesa, who, ultimately, apprehensively accepted the invitation just a day before the National Convention of the MNR was set to announce its presidential binomial.[22]

The PAT factor edit

According to Mauricio Balcázar—former minister and son-in-law to Sánchez de Lozada—the MNR paid Mesa over US$800,000 in ten installments between the 2002 campaign and October 2003 in exchange for his vice-presidential candidacy. As alleged by Balcázar, on the day of the MNR Convention, Mesa demanded the payment and an initial guarantee check of US$200,000 for his television channel PAT, threatening to withdraw his nomination if the party did not comply. For Balcázar, this constituted "extortion"—although he did not realize it at the time—because the MNR had no time to seek an alternative candidate.[23][d] An investigation carried out by analyst Carlos Valverde uncovered documents proving deposits totaling Bs6 million (US$831,454) into the bank account of PAT starting in mid-2002 and ending in October 2003. A majority of the transactions were recorded as loans to PAT by the Itaca company, the owner of ninety-nine percent of the channel's share quotas; in effect, a self-grant that raised money laundering concerns.[25] For his part, Mesa refused to make a definitive statement on the allegations during his 2019 presidential bid, asserting that he would not respond to the "dirty war" being waged by his electoral opponents. At the same time, he affirmed that it was "based on false testimonies, on false investigations, and on the fact that, if it was an irregular act, it was carried out more than sixteen years ago".[26]

2002 general election edit

The MNR closed its Extraordinary National Convention on 3 February with the announcement of Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada as the party's presidential candidate, accompanied by Carlos Mesa as his non-partisan running mate. Accepting the nomination, Mesa cited resolving the economic crisis and fighting institutional corruption as the main factors in his decision to join the electoral binomial.[27] At first glance, election day on 30 June yielded an electoral victory for the Sánchez de Lozada-Mesa ticket amid a well-conducted and orderly process, generally accepted by the contending parties and their supporters. But with a plurality of just 22.5 percent, the MNR emerged as the only traditional party that could claim a modicum of popular support. Second and third place, respectively, went to the Movement for Socialism (MAS-IPSP) of the indigenous cocalero activist Evo Morales and the New Republican Force (NFR) of Cochabamba Mayor Manfred Reyes Villa; each of them took a twenty percent share of the vote. Paz Zamora's Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR) came fourth with 16.3 percent, while Nationalist Democratic Action (ADN)—the party holding the incumbent presidency—did not even reach four percent.[28] The blow to the country's traditional party system resulted in a tense runoff in which Sánchez de Lozada was forced to form an unlikely coalition with Paz Zamora in order to shore up a majority of congressional support. With eighty-four votes in their favor, Congress elected Sánchez de Lozada and Mesa as the constitutional president and vice president on 4 August, taking office two days later.[29][30]

A frustrated vice presidency edit

The fight against corruption edit

 
Official vice-presidential portrait, 2002.

In keeping with his campaign promise to make fighting corruption the central point of his administration, Mesa, on 11 August 2002, launched the Technical Unit against Corruption under the leadership of the journalist Lupe Cajías. The unit was set as a component of the Vice Presidency, operating independently of the Prosecutor's Office.[31] In addition to Cajías, it was composed of a "petite cabinet" consisting of José Galindo, Jorge Cortés, and Alfonso Ferrufino.[32] On 12 August 2003, the post was refounded as the Secretariat of the Fight against Corruption, which Mesa credited to be "without doubt the greatest contribution of my [vice presidential] management".[33] Two days after his assumption to the presidency, Mesa elevated the secretariat to the high executive level as the Presidential Anticorruption Delegation.[34]

Mesa's anti-corruption efforts were not without criticism. A year into her administration, Cajías admitted that her team had "barely scratched corruption" and that the post suffered "structural issues".[35] One such issue was the lack of coordination between the secretariat and other parts of the judicial system; prosecutors annulled various cases presented by her office, and the ambiguity of the office's functions eventually relegated it to issuing opinions and periodically publishing public reports on alleged acts of corruption.[36]

Mesa attributed many of the shortfalls of his anti-corruption work to a lack of cooperation from the president. One example came in July 2003 when Secretary Cajías issued Report N° 13. A contingent of conscripts and 180 soldiers of the Bolivian Army had been illegally forced to work harvesting Macororó on the Santa Monica farm in the Chiquitos Province of Santa Cruz for no wage and in conditions of general servitude.[37] The case implicated Minister of Defense Freddy Teodovich and Santa Cruz Prefect Mario Justiniano. For this reason, on 10 July, Mesa met with Sánchez de Lozada to request the dismissal of Teodovich, an action the president refused to take because the minister was an influential component of the cabinet and the MNR. Mesa considered this a revocation of the president's promise to allow him to freely take anti-corruption measures, and the incident served to aggravate festering grievances between the two.[38]

Black February edit

February 2003 presented the first significant ordeal that shook Mesa's confidence in the government. On the ninth, President Sánchez de Lozada, under pressure from the International Monetary Fund to significantly reduce the country's fiscal deficit, presented a new tax bill that, among other factors, imposed a salary tax on workers making a certain threshold of income. The response was near-universal outrage and a series of protests that after a few days were joined by the National Police Corps.[39][40] Given the absence of law enforcement, the demonstrations quickly devolved into riots, which eventually forced government officials to flee their offices. In his account of events, Mesa states that "what I saw was hell". At 5:00 p.m. on 12 February, Mesa, sequestered at the president's private residence, was informed that the Vice Presidency had been set aflame by vandals, an action he describes as "my apocalypse". "It seemed to me that all the illusions of public service I promised on 6 August upon taking office were shattered".[41]

Black October: Mesa pulls out edit

A few days ago, my country lived through serious episodes of violence, which have forced us to reflect. We are aware of the fact that the last twenty-one years of democracy — the longest uninterrupted period in our history — are at stake as we face the legitimate pressure exercised by the marginalized sectors of our society, who deserve our attention ... Loss of trust in these essential elements of democracy is one of the greatest dangers to the future of our society.

— Carlos Mesa, Address to the 58th United Nations General Assembly, 24 September 2003.[42]

By September, the simmering popular grievances of the time, mainly related to the export of natural gas to the United States through Chile, had ignited into nationwide social unrest. On 12 October, Mesa arrived in La Paz for a meeting with the president, flying in by helicopter due to the ongoing blockades making accessing the capital by land impossible.[43] At 1:34 p.m., Mesa ate lunch with Sánchez de Lozada at the presidential residence in San Jorge, where he pleaded with the president to call a referendum on gas and open up the possibility of a constituent assembly. Sánchez de Lozada, whom Mesa describes as "the most stubborn man I have ever met", remained steadfast in his refusal to give in to social demands, causing the vice president to snap at him that "the dead are going to bury you".[44] Amid their heated discussion, the government's bloody suppression of demonstrations in El Alto began to count its first deaths. Reports of the massacre of protesters, which Mesa learned from the media, definitively ruptured relations between him and Sánchez de Lozada.[45] The following day, the vice president publicly withdrew his support for the government. In his statement, Mesa outlined that the cost of human lives was something that his "conscience as a human being cannot tolerate", and he implored the government to "seek a position of dialogue and establish peace".[46] At a press conference held three days later, he ratified his refusal to cooperate, stating: "I do not have the courage to kill, nor will I have the courage to kill tomorrow. For that reason, it is impossible to think about my return to government".[47]

Between the thirteenth and the seventeenth, Mesa withdrew to his private residence. Crucially, however, he determined not to resign from the vice presidency. He later recounted that the decision came from his memory of the 2001 crisis in Argentina. During that time, President Fernando de la Rúa resigned, causing a crisis of succession because Vice President Carlos Álvarez, in protest, had vacated the office the year prior. According to Mesa: "If there was any value in the position, I thought, it was precisely guaranteeing democratic continuity in extreme cases".[48]

Mesa's decision was met with harsh criticism by sectors still loyal to Sánchez de Lozada. Among the leadership of the MNR, it was made clear that the party was "upset with Mr. Carlos Mesa", while legislators of the MIR accused him of failing to fulfill his duty as a mediator between Congress and the government.[49] According to Edgar Zegarra: "he did not tell us absolutely anything about the decisions he was going to make", a fact which the MNR deputy claimed was a sign of "deep disloyalty" on Mesa's behalf.[50]

At the same time, on 14 October, the United States Department of State informed Mesa that the US "would not under any circumstances support a possible government headed by [him]". Two days later, US Ambassador David N. Greenlee personally met with Mesa at his home to request that he return to the government, which he refused to do.[51] Given that, Greenlee recounts asking Mesa that "if you can't support the president anymore, why don't you resign?". For the ambassador, the question was a "philosophical point, not a political one", but it nonetheless fomented an untrusting relationship between the two. At the end of their discussion, it was learned that the press had intercepted Greenlee's radio traffic and had gathered outside Mesa's home. Before television crews, the two spoke of a "friendly and constructive conversation", though Greenlee states that "it wasn't of that kind".[52] The following day, with it becoming increasingly clear that Sánchez de Lozada would soon step down, the Department of State conceded and informed Mesa that the US would support his succession.[51]

At midday on 17 October, Minister of the Presidency Guillermo Justiniano called Mesa to inform him that the president would soon resign and invited him to discuss conditions surrounding his departure. Mere hours later, however, Justiniano called again to tell Mesa that Sánchez de Lozada had already left the Palacio Quemado. At 6:00 p.m., Hormando Vaca Díez and Oscar Arrien, presidents of the Senate and Chamber of Deputies, visited Mesa to inform him that they would soon accept the president's resignation and that constitutional succession corresponded to him. At the same time, they insisted that he pledge to stay in office for the mandated term ending on 6 August 2007.[51]

Presidency (2003–2005) edit

Without ballot boxes or rifles edit

External videos
Swearing-in of President Carlos Mesa
 
Carlos Mesa delivers his inaugural address before the National Congress
  Discursos - Posesión del Pte. Carlos D. Mesa Gisbert

Between 5:25 p.m. and 10:30 p.m., the presidency remained effectively vacant.[48] At a plenary session of the National Congress, an overwhelming majority of ninety-seven to thirty legislators—with the exception of all but one member of the MNR—voted to accept Sánchez de Lozada's resignation.[53][54] Vice President Mesa was subsequently sworn in as the 63rd president of Bolivia, assuming office through constitutional succession.[55][56]

Mesa opened his inaugural address with a conciliatory tone, emphasizing that "Bolivia is not yet a country among equals".[57] He outlined his intent to call for a binding referendum on gas exports, promised to review the privatization of hydrocarbons, and pledged to call for a constituent assembly to revise the Constitution in hopes of addressing ethnic and regional divisions.[58] These points became known as the "October Agenda" and composed the core of Mesa's government program during his presidency.[59] His accession to office was largely well received by the country's social sectors, who heeded his request for demobilization and an end to the blockades.[57] From Cochabamba, Evo Morales indicated that the ouster of Sánchez de Lozada was "just a small victory" but also expressed his willingness to support Mesa's policy initiatives.[60][61]

Mesa's investiture was met with far more skepticism among the traditional parties. His pledge to form a non-partisan cabinet devoid of participation from any political party adherents, which Mesa phrased as a "sacrifice" they would have to make, was a significant blow to their influence, described by one MNR deputy as "political suicide".[57] The second shock came when Mesa announced his intent to bring his term to a conclusion before 2007, as legally prescribed. He called for a "transitional" government and left Congress responsible for setting a date for new elections.[60] In January 2004, amid a high approval rating and broad popular support, Mesa retracted this promise and announced his intent to complete Sánchez de Lozada's term.[62]

Entering the Palacio Quemado, Mesa was met with an executive headquarters entirely devoid of personnel, save for the presence of his family and some friends who came to visit. There, he spoke with Bishop Jesús Juárez, who suggested to him that to guarantee the country's pacification, he had to be in El Alto the next day.[63] Mesa heeded the advice, traveling in his first full day as president to the former epicenter of the social conflicts to participate in a ceremony in tribute to the victims of the previous government's violent occupation of the city. Before a crowd of some 8,000 people, he declared that his government would grant compensation of Bs50,000 to the relatives of the deceased and, most importantly, announced an inquiry into those culpable for the previous week's repressions.[64] With the slogan "neither forget, nor revenge: justice!", Mesa promised that he would ask Congress to begin a "responsible investigation" that would establish the responsibility of Sánchez de Lozada and members of his government for the numerous deaths caused during the October crisis.[65] Almost a year later, on 14 October 2004, the National Congress, by a vote of 126 to thirteen, authorized a trial of responsibilities against Sánchez de Lozada and his entire cabinet under the purview of the Law of Responsibilities (Law N° 2445), precisely promulgated by the ex-president. Mesa applauded its passage as a "historic decision" that "strengthens democracy and renews civic faith in its institutions".[66][67]

Domestic policy edit

Economy edit

 
Mesa attends the funeral of Pope John Paul II, 8 April 2005.

Among the most pressing challenges facing the early Mesa government was the ongoing economic recession—at the start of 2003, the fiscal deficit lay at 8.7 percent of GDP.[68] On 1 February 2004, Mesa laid out his economic program aimed at reducing government waste through fiscal austerity and the imposition of new taxes on the nation's highest earners. Within the public service sector, he implemented a ten percent reduction in his own salary as president and a five percent cut in the wages of all high officials, as well as eliminated the "bonuses" of up to US$4,000 granted to ministers, vice ministers, and legislators through which their wages had nearly doubled. On that point, Mesa introduced measures that prohibited government officials from having wages higher than the president's. In the private sector, he imposed a tax on bank transactions and 1.5 percent of the net worth of those making more than US$50,000.[69][70] At the conclusion of Mesa's first full year in office, the fiscal deficit had been reduced to 5.5 percent and was at 2.4 percent by the end of 2005.[71][72]

Judiciary edit

Since 1999, the Supreme Court of Justice had been operating at a reduced capacity. Congress had left several vacancies due to its inability to nominate judges who could gain the support of two-thirds of the legislators, causing delays in the judicial system because the Court could not reach the majorities necessary to adopt rulings. In light of the parliamentary recess, on 31 July 2004, through Supreme Decree N° 27650, Mesa swore in six new acting Supreme Court magistrates, two judicial counselors, and nine district prosecutors.[73] Mesa justified that in this way, he had "guarantee[d] the independence of the judicial power, starkly controlled by the parties ...". The recess appointments were challenged by Congress, which filed a motion with the Constitutional Court on the grounds that Mesa had violated the separation of powers. On 11 November, the Court ruled against Mesa and annulled the appointments.[74][75]

Constitutional reform edit

The primary barrier to Mesa's October Agenda, particularly regarding the promise of a referendum and a constituent assembly, was that the Political Constitution of the State did not prescribe any mechanisms to carry out either venture. For this reason, the first step toward the president's program was to amend said Constitution. To do this, Law N° 2410 On The Necessity of Reform to the Constitution—promulgated in 2002 by then-president Jorge Quiroga—was unarchived in order to provide a legal framework for the new alterations.[76][77] On 20 February 2004, Congress sanctioned, and Mesa promulgated Law N° 2631, amending the Constitution to allow for a constituent assembly and the ability to call for either a citizen legislative initiative or a referendum. In addition to the main points, the opportunity was also taken to abolish parliamentary immunity and allow for dual citizenship.[78][79]

Hydrocarbons and gas edit

2004 gas referendum edit
Results of the 2004 gas referendum
18 July 2004 (2004-07-18)
Results
Repeal Law N° 1689
86.6%
Recover wellhead ownership
92.2%
Reestablish YPFB
87.3%
Export gas as Pacific strategy
54.8%
Export gas as national policy
61.7%
Source: Nohlen[80]

A few months after the formalization of the new legal structure, on 13 April 2004, Mesa issued the call for a referendum on gas, opting to do so through supreme decree given a National Congress whose majority opposed his agenda.[81][82] The latter decision was the basis for the traditional parties' objection to the plebiscite; the MIR, ADN, and sectors of the MNR, among other criticisms, voiced their opinion that the convocation of the referendum through any form other than a law passed by the legislature was illegal. Legislators of Solidarity Civic Unity (UCS) filed two lawsuits with the Constitutional Court alleging the unconstitutionality of the referendum. Days before the vote, the Court ruled in favor of Mesa and the National Electoral Court.[83]

Simultaneously, the five questions, drafted by both Mesa and MAS representatives,[e] caused a divide in the labor and social movements because they did not directly address the nationalization of gas reserves, an action supported by over eighty percent of the country. The country's largest workers' unions—the Bolivian Workers' Center (COB), the Regional Workers' Center of El Alto (COR-El Alto), the Unified Syndical Confederation of Rural Workers (CSUTCB), and the Gas Coordinator, among others—all voiced their discontent with this crucial omission and called for a boycott of the vote, promoting roadblocks and demonstrations to block access to polling sites.[84][85][86] On the other hand, the Bartolina Sisa Confederation, as well as peasant unions in Potosí, Oruro, and Cochabamba backed the vote in support of Morales.[87] For his part, Morales encouraged a "yes" vote on the first three questions and a "no" on the last two, which concerned issues surrounding exports. Mesa's campaign denounced the boycott and ramped up security at polling centers to defend against threats of violence, while the Electoral Court imposed a fine of Bs150 (US$19) for those who did not vote.[88]

The outcome of the 18 July vote yielded largely positive results for the Mesa administration. Labor protests failed to significantly reduce turnout, which came in at 60.06 percent, a figure that, while the lowest of any election since the transition to democracy in 1982, was still substantial. The Electoral Court argued that, as a referendum, participation levels were not comparable to previously held general or municipal elections. Most importantly, all five questions passed by broad margins. Questions one through three regarding the repeal of Sánchez de Lozada's hydrocarbons law, State recovery of hydrocarbon ownership at the wellhead, and the reestablishment of YPFB all passed with over eighty percent of the vote—question two achieved over ninety percent. Meanwhile, coinciding with the position of the MAS, questions four and five on exports saw the least support, though they still received over fifty percent and sixty percent of the vote, respectively.[89] Mesa hailed the results as a significant victory and a vote of confidence in his administration, later calling it "the brightest moment of our government".[81][90][91]

2005 Hydrocarbons Law edit

Immediately following the referendum, Mesa began negotiating with Congress, whose participation was necessary to formulate and eventually sanction a law on hydrocarbons. His first step was to introduce the Law of Execution and Compliance of the Referendum—dubbed the "short law"—to establish a clear interpretation of the vote's results and commit to comply with them. Mesa was adamant that the short law must be "physically separate" from any eventual hydrocarbons legislation. Regardless, the measure was roundly rejected by the legislature, which insisted on a singular hydrocarbons bill. As a result, Mesa announced on 20 August that he would not enact any legislation authorized by Congress until an agreement was reached, a pledge he was forced to retract two days later amid criticism that he was jeopardizing the convocation of municipal elections.[92] After a few weeks of negotiations, the president relented and agreed to present a solitary "large law" to Congress for consideration.[93]

Ultimately, without a party base of his own, Mesa was incapable of overcoming Congress's ability to block his policy initiatives. In late October, peasant and mining sectors led by Morales and the COB conducted mass demonstrations in La Paz, blockading the streets in and around Congress. On 20 October, faced with immense external pressure from over 15,000 peasant protesters arriving from Caracollo, Congress discarded the president's bill and agreed to move forward with the one proposed by the Mixed Commission for Economic Development, headed by Santos Ramírez of the MAS.[94] With victory at hand, Morales agreed to demobilize his followers.[95] After the demise of Mesa's project, negotiations moved forward over the more radical proposal. The primary point of contention between parliamentarians of different parties surrounded question two of the referendum and what exactly "recover[y of] ownership over all hydrocarbons" meant. While more radical sectors called for complete nationalization of the industry, the MAS took a more moderate stance, demanding that oil companies be subject to a royalty of fifty percent of their profits. The compromise of the traditional parties was to approve a draft on 3 March 2005 that kept the preexisting eighteen percent royalty in place but added a thirty-two percent profits tax that, cumulatively, would reach fifty percent.[96] In response, MAS sectors mobilized their bases in Cochabamba and Chuquisaca, initiating blockades and roadblocks, actions that shattered the tacit alliance Morales had shared with Mesa up to that point.[97]

The dramatic upturn in the social climate placed Mesa in a precarious political position—one that urgently necessitated a skillful maneuver in order to circumvent a repeat of the government repressions of October 2003, which Mesa refused to allow. The scheme ultimately devised was two-fold: the presentation of the president's revocable resignation to Congress and a simultaneous televised address to the nation.[97] In a forty-five-minute speech broadcast on radio and television, Mesa put to use his oratory skills, denouncing both left-wing labor sectors as well as conservative autonomists and business elites and directly calling out Evo Morales by name. In addition, he reiterated his statement that "I am not willing to kill" and promised that "there will be no deaths on my back" before announcing to the nation his intent to resign from the presidency on the grounds that it was impossible to govern under the threat of blockades.[99] The gamble succeeded in inverting middle-class sentiment in his favor and against his opponents. Soon after the speech, a mass demonstration reaching approximately 5,000 people assembled outside the Plaza Murillo to support of the continuity of Mesa's mandate. Similar gatherings took place in other cities.[100][101]

With popular support and political momentum at his back, Mesa immediately set about exerting pressure on Congress. Within hours, at a plenary session of legislators convened to formulate a response to Mesa's resignation, Minister of the Presidency José Galindo laid out the president's terms for remaining in office. After three days of negotiations, Congress unanimously voted to reject Mesa's resignation on 8 March. In exchange, the legislature committed to a four-point agenda: expedite the drafting of the hydrocarbons bill; begin the process of approving an autonomy referendum, the democratic election of prefects, and the convocation of a constituent assembly; construct a national "social pact"; and initiate efforts to end the ongoing blockades. The agreement was formalized between Mesa and six of the eight congressional parties: the traditional right-wing parties, embattled and under pressure, accepted, while the MAS and the Pachakuti Indigenous Movement (MIP; a related left-wing party) refused to sign, and from that point were marginalized entirely, solidifying the split between Mesa and Morales for the rest of his administration.[102][103]

 
Mesa's complex relationship with Evo Morales has been one of both cooperation and open hostility.[104]

Mesa's brief alliance with the conservative sectors of Congress proved tenuous. Recalling the accord, Mesa regretted that "I wasted the chance; I accepted a bad agreement with Congress, a generic document, of moral commitments that were never fulfilled". He further outlined that a better course of action would have been to impose his own hydrocarbons bill as a condition for withdrawing his resignation.[105] On 15 March, the Chamber of Deputies approved the Hydrocarbons Law, maintaining the eighteen percent royalty and thirty-two percent tax. Despite not meeting the opposition's demands, Morales relented and called off the ongoing strikes. Mesa, however, maintained that the country did not have the economic capacity to carry out the law and argued that the new tax should be implemented gradually, starting at twelve percent and increasing to thirty-two percent within a decade.[106]

Nonetheless, on 6 May, Congress moved forward and passed the controversial bill. Despite having drafted it themselves, the failure to agree on the fifty percent royalty led the MAS to near-unanimously vote against it.[107] Faced with two unappealing choices of either promulgating the law or vetoing it, Mesa took a third option: neither. As stipulated by Article 78 of the Constitution: "Laws not vetoed or not promulgated by the president of the republic within ten days from their receipt, will be promulgated by the president of the congress". On 16 May, President of the Senate Hormando Vaca Díez signed the bill into law and criticized Mesa for "[bringing] the country to a point of crisis and uncertainty".[108][109]

Autonomies edit

One of the major challenges to the Mesa government was the increasing calls for decentralization from business and civic sectors in the Santa Cruz Department. For years, the national government had systemically blocked the issue of departmental autonomy and the democratic election of prefects. The Banzer and Quiroga administrations sidestepped it entirely, while Sánchez de Lozada was actively hostile to the prospect, viewing it as the basis for the collapse of the unitary state.[110] Mesa took a different stance on the issue, announcing on 20 April 2004 his support for regional autonomy. He outlined his government's intent to address the matter through the convocation of a constituent assembly that would amend the relevant articles in the Constitution in order to provide for the decentralization of the country and the election of prefects and departmental councilors by popular vote. In tandem, he issued two decrees that month: one served to strengthen departmental councils while the other determined the administrative decentralization of regional health and education services.[111][112][113] The response from Santa Cruz civic leaders, however, was unsupportive of Mesa's proposal. On 22 June, under the leadership of Rubén Costas—head of the Pro Santa Cruz Committee—a civic council was convened that approved an eleven-point document known as the "June Agenda" against blockades, centralism, and violence. It demanded a national referendum on autonomies and began collecting signatures for a departmental plebiscite to be held prior to the convocation of the constituent assembly.[114]

This context precipitated an antagonistic relationship between the Mesa administration and Santa Cruz civic leaders and business elites for the duration of his mandate. Although Mesa's policy proposals remained in favor of a move toward autonomy, his approval rating in the department fell from sixty-one percent in June to thirty-six percent by the end of 2004.[115] The culmination of this animosity came on 30 December when the government announced the termination of its fuel subsidy in order to reduce the rate of smuggling. The result was a twenty-three percent increase in the price of diesel and a ten percent gasoline hike.[116] The unpopular measure—dubbed the "dieselazo"—generated nationwide protests from both left-wing indigenous and labor groups and right-wing business sectors.[117] Most seriously, autonomist groups in Santa Cruz, joined later by civic groups in Tarija, quickly coopted the demonstrations in those departments, adding the call for autonomy to their list of demands even after the government agreed to reduce the diesel increase to fifteen percent.[118][119] On 21 January, the Armed Forces signaled to the president their willingness to intervene in the event that Santa Cruz moved to declare itself autonomous in violation of the Constitution. Faced with the possibility of an armed confrontation similar to that of October 2003, Mesa, on 26 January, resolved with his cabinet to allow the Cruceños to move forward with self-rule unimpeded. The following day, with news that the Santa Cruz Youth Union had decided to seize all public institutions in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Mesa gave the order to withdraw all civil and police personnel from public buildings, including the prefecture, in order to avoid armed conflict.[120] On 28 January, Santa Cruz was proclaimed an autonomous department at a cabildo held at the foot of the Christ the Redeemer Monument. The declaration came with the formation of a provisional assembly that would negotiate with the government for a departmental autonomy referendum in order to legitimize the new authority, which at the moment contravened the Constitution.[121][122] That same day, Mesa issued Supreme Decree N° 27988, which called for the election of prefects in all nine departments. Since the Constitution granted the power to designate prefects solely to the president, the decree worked around that by constraining the head of state only to appoint those who obtained a majority of the popular vote.[123][124] The decree was formalized by a complementary law passed by Congress on 8 April.[125] On 11 February, Mesa delegated to Congress the task of setting a date for the autonomies referendum.[126]

Foreign policy edit

External videos
Signing of the gas export contract to Argentina
 
Mesa meets with Argentine President Néstor Kirchner, 22 July 2004.
  Discursos - Firma del contrato de venta de gas a la Argentina

Argentina edit

On 15 April 2004, Mesa authorized an agreement with Argentine President Néstor Kirchner allowing for the sale of four million cubic meters daily of Bolivian gas for a six-month period with the possibility of renewal depending on the outcome of the July referendum.[127] The arrangement was supported by civic groups in Tarija—home to eighty-five percent of the country's natural gas—but was met with suspicion by certain labor sectors who viewed it as a possible roundabout way for Bolivian gas to be exported to Chile through Argentina.[128] In view of this, the Mesa administration conditioned the sale on the promise that not "one molecule" of Bolivian gas could be exported to Chile. Doing so would constitute a contract violation on the part of Argentina.[129] Mesa met with Kirchner twice more during his presidency, this time in Bolivia, once for a short discussion in July and another in October 2004.[130] In the latter, the two presidents signed an agreement that increased Bolivian gas export volumes from 6.5 million to 26.5 million cubic meters per day to help mitigate the Argentine energy crisis.[131]

External videos
Monterrey Special Summit of the Americas
 
Mesa with U.S. President George W. Bush in Monterrey, Mexico, 13 January 2004.
  Discursos - Cumbre Extraordinaria de las Américas

Chile and the Maritime Demand edit

As with near-universally all previous governments, the relationship between Bolivia and Chile during the Mesa administration centered fundamentally on Bolivia's claim of sovereign access to the Pacific Ocean, a dispute which, by 2004, had reached its centennial without compromise. Just under a month into Mesa's presidency, the first discussions surrounding the maritime issue took place. On 14 November 2003, during the ongoing Ibero-American Summit, Mesa met privately with Chilean President Ricardo Lagos at the Los Tajibos Hotel in Santa Cruz de la Sierra. The dialogue between the two heads of state concluded with an agreement in principle on a sovereign corridor connecting Bolivia to the Pacific through a 10 km (6.21 mi) strip of land along the Chile–Peru border. As per the Treaty of Ancón, any cession of land formerly belonging to Peru necessitates Peruvian approval and, therefore, Lagos stipulated that "if there is a Peruvian yes, there will be a Chilean yes".[132]

Mesa raised the maritime claim again at the Monterrey Special Summit of the Americas in January 2004. There, he emphasized the good relationship between the two countries but expressed his view that such relations required the resolution of issues that "for a reason of justice" must be resolved.[133] Mesa's statements opened a rift between himself and Lagos, who expressed his "regret [for] what happened in Monterrey because these are spaces to advance on collective and multilateral issues".[134] Nonetheless, Mesa was received with praise by the National Congress, which declared "its strongest and most determined support" for the president. Later that month, at a seven-hour session of parliament, Congress declared the maritime claim to be an "inalienable right of the Bolivian people" and issued its approval for Mesa's strategy of multilateralizing the demand in order to gain support from as many nations as possible.[135][136]

At the 34th General Assembly of the Organization of American States held in Quito, Ecuador, the Bolivian delegation distributed its Libro Azul, which recounted the government's interpretation of events surrounding the War of the Pacific and justifies the country's historical claim. The 35th OAS General Assembly was held in Fort Lauderdale from 5 to 7 June 2005; Mesa issued his definitive resignation on 6 June. It was the last time the outgoing government addressed the maritime claim, bringing an end to Mesa's strategy against Chile.[137]

Peru edit

 
Presidents of Bolivia, Brazil, and Peru inaugurate a bridge connecting Brazil and Peru, 11 August 2004.

At a meeting in Lima held on 4 November 2003, Mesa and Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo agreed on the framework for a common market between the two states in order to support greater cultural, commercial, and economic integration as advocated by the Andean Community.[138] Days after voters approved gas exportation as part of national policy in the gas referendum, the Bolivian government scheduled talks with their counterparts in Peru to discuss the topic.[139] On 4 August 2004, Mesa and Toledo signed a letter of intent promising to analyze the joint exportation of natural gas. The deal granted Bolivia a special economic zone centered on the southern port of Ilo, from where it could export its gas to lucrative markets in Mexico and the United States. The agreement allowed Bolivia access to the Pacific for the first time in over a century.[140] Days later, the two presidents, along with Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, inaugurated two bridges connecting Bolivia and Peru to Brazil. Through this, Toledo expressed his hope that a tripartite market between the three countries could pave the way for broader continental integration.[141]

Definitive resignation edit

Despite enjoying an approval rating of over sixty percent, Mesa's inability to find a compromise with the National Congress, especially after his break in relations with the MAS, led him to call for an early end to his term. On 15 March 2005, less than a week after Congress rejected his resignation, Mesa announced his intent to introduce a bill that would advance the call for general elections to 28 August, cutting short his term by two years.[142] Two days later, Congress rejected his proposal under the justification that it "lack[ed] a legal basis".[143]

After returning the unenacted hydrocarbons bill to Congress, Mesa attempted to salvage his domestic policy agenda by calling a "National Meeting for Unity" to be held in Sucre on 16 May. The conference would have sought to find consensus on the hydrocarbons law and establish concrete dates for the convocation of an autonomies referendum and elections for a constituent assembly and prefects. Ninety-seven sectors were invited, including the three branches of government, ex-presidents, heads of political parties, mayors of the nine departmental capitols and El Alto, the association of municipalities, the presidents of the nine departmental civic committees, four representatives of indigenous organizations, two from trade unions, and two from large businesses.[144][145] While the Catholic Church, the Human Rights Assembly, and some civic groups agreed to participate, most political parties rejected the meeting, including both the MNR and MAS. Mesa was ultimately forced to suspend the event after Congress declined to attend.[146][147]

By this point, the country faced increasingly debilitating strikes and demonstrations from opposing groups seeking conflicting goals. The MAS demanded the urgent convocation of a constituent assembly to rewrite the Constitution. They were supported by trade unions, which additionally called for the immediate nationalization of gas. In the eastern departments, protests were held calling for a referendum on autonomies. The unrest was exacerbated by the indecision of Congress, which remained deadlocked over whether to convene the constituent assembly and later hold the autonomies referendum or hold both constituent elections and the referendum simultaneously. Finally, on 2 June, Mesa opted to circumvent the legislature and, by supreme decree, scheduled the referendum and elections for the constituent assembly for 16 October.[148][149]

Mesa's actions failed to quell the unrest and were rejected by both left-wing and right-wing sectors of the country. Faced with the tense political situation and unwilling to allow military action against protesters, Mesa tendered his resignation on 6 June. With that, the responsibility fell to Congress to accept it and swear in a new individual to the presidency. The candidate next in line to succeed Mesa was Hormando Vaca Díez, the president of the Senate, followed by Mario Cossío of the Chamber of Deputies.[150] Viewing that the country would not accept such a succession by members of the traditional political parties, Mesa called on Vaca Díez and Cossío to renounce their succession rights to avoid an "explosion" in the country. This request was not considered by Vaca Díez, who announced his intention to convene a session of Congress in Sucre—La Paz was almost entirely blockaded—to accept Mesa's resignation and install himself as president.[151] After three days of resistance, Vaca Díez conceded to popular pressure and, along with Cossío, the two legislative heads renounced their right to succession.[152] At 11:45 p.m. on 9 June 2005, Eduardo Rodríguez Veltzé, the president of the Supreme Court of Justice, was sworn in as the 64th president of Bolivia at an extraordinary session of Congress held in Sucre.[153] The following day, Mesa received Rodríguez Veltzé in La Paz. For Mesa, "that moment had an immense symbolic load. I had entered through the front door and was leaving through the front door, with my forehead high and looking the country in the eye".[154]

Post-presidency (2005–2018) edit

 
Mesa at a panel of the Global Rule of Law Exchange in São Paulo, 2016.

After his departure from the Palacio Quemado, Mesa retired from politics and returned to his work as a journalist. In 2008, he published Presidencia Sitiada, a memoir of his time as head of state. The following year, together with Mario Espinoza, he directed, wrote, and narrated Bolivia Siglo XX, a documentary series covering the most important events in twentieth-century Bolivian history.[104] On 7 December 2012, the Association of Journalists of La Paz awarded Mesa the National Journalism Award for his extensive contributions to Bolivian media.[155][156]

Spokesman for the Maritime Demand edit

On 28 April 2014, now-president Evo Morales announced the appointment of Mesa as a member of the team of the Strategic Directorate of the Maritime Claim (DIREMAR). As outlined by the president, Mesa's task would be to represent Bolivia's maritime claim in all international forums, presenting the legal and historical bases of the country's claim against Chile, for which it had filed a lawsuit with the International Court of Justice.[157][158] The decision to appoint Mesa did not come as a surprise; several politicians in past weeks, including President of the Chamber of Deputies Marcelo Elío Chávez, had suggested his inclusion on the DIREMAR team due to his historical expertise. Speculation had even arisen that he might be appointed ambassador to Peru, an extreme Morales was not entirely comfortable with and which he circumvented by specifying that Mesa's new post would not constitute an official diplomatic office because "it is not necessary for him to have this position [since] as a former president and former vice president he has all the authority to assume this responsibility".[159] This fact was reiterated by Mesa, who stated that he had agreed with the president that "I am not a public official, I will not be appointed, nor will there be a swearing-in ceremony". He further noted that he would hold his position ad honorem and would not receive a salary for his work.[160] However, as noted by economist Alberto Bonadona, following his appointment, the government began paying Mesa the life annuity that corresponded to him as a former president, which it had previously blocked from being delivered. "With all certainty, they [paid] him retroactively", Bonadona stated.[161]

 
Cover of The Book of the Sea, coordinated by Mesa.

Mesa began his task with an eye towards the 50th G77 + China Summit, hosted by Bolivia in Santa Cruz de la Sierra between 14 and 15 June of that year. While Mesa stated that Bolivia would not seek an official statement of solidarity from the member states present, he highlighted the gathering as an opportunity to disseminate the country's maritime claim and stated that the meeting "should have the issue of the sea as a fundamental aspect".[162][163] On 16 June, Mesa and Morales jointly presented El Libro del Mar at a ceremony in the Palacio Quemado. The book, distributed to the attendees of the G77 in the previous days, described the essential arguments that Bolivia intended to present to the international community.[164][165]

External videos
Interview in Santiago, Chile
 
Juan Manuel Astorga interviews Mesa for the program El Informante
  Entrevista en Santiago de Chile

During this time, a notable dichotomy between Mesa's international and domestic relationship with Morales developed. On the one hand, he supported and closely cooperated with the president on matters relating to the maritime lawsuit. At the same time, he remained harshly critical of the government's undemocratic tendencies, and the ruling party filed various legal complaints against him, the most notable being the Quiborax case in which he was accused of breach of duties for actions taken during his presidency.[166][104] Vice President Álvaro García Linera described Mesa as "an excellent explainer of the maritime cause" but stated that "as a politician, internally, he is a resounding failure".[167] Nonetheless, in 2019, Mesa affirmed that, if asked to return as spokesman for the maritime cause, he "would do it again one, two, five, 100, 200 times more".[168]

In late September 2018, Mesa traveled to The Hague to hear the ICJ's final ruling.[169] In an interview for the Chilean newspaper La Tercera, Mesa assured that "the Bolivian people are prepared to receive the ruling regardless of its content" and urged both countries to abide by the court's decision.[170] On 1 October 2018, by a vote of twelve to three, the ICJ ruled that Chile was not obligated to negotiate sovereign access to the Pacific with Bolivia.[171] Shortly after, Mesa called on Bolivians to "accept the ruling even though it seems unfair". He urged the government to respect the decision and asked that it move forward with a new policy towards Chile with the understanding that it is not obliged to negotiate.[172]

Return to politics (2018–present) edit

In mid-2018, Mesa appeared as a lead contender against Morales in early voting intention polls. On 29 July 2018, the company Mercados y Samples released a poll for Página Siete that showed Mesa with a first-round favorability of twenty-five percent, two points behind Morales' twenty-seven percent. Such a result would launch a runoff in which polling gave Mesa an over ten-point victory of forty-eight percent over Morales' thirty-two percent. MAS Senator Ciro Zabala credited this polling victory to the opposition making Mesa seem "victimized" by the Quiborax case. This point was reiterated by Deputy Edgar Montaño, who admitted that the controversy "makes Mesa grow". On the other hand, opposition leaders affirmed that Mesa's popularity was due to what they claimed to be political persecution by the government against him.[173]

External videos
For a Government of Citizens
 
Carlos Mesa announces his candidacy for the presidency
  Carlos Mesa anuncia su candidatura a la presidencia del Estado – "Por un Gobierno de Ciudadanos"

In an interview with Erbol on 19 September, Mesa declared that he would not make any political statements or comment on his potential candidacy "as long as the issue of the sea is the fundamental question", committing himself entirely to his duties until the ruling by The Hague on 1 October.[174] On 5 October, the Revolutionary Left Front (FRI) formally invited Mesa to be the party's presidential candidate in the 2019 elections. While Mesa claimed that he would make a decision "in the next few hours", both Walter Villagra, secretary-general of the FRI, and Mesa's lawyer, Carlos Alarcón, confirmed that he had already accepted.[175] The following day, Mesa formally launched his 2019 presidential candidacy. In a video message titled "For a Government of Citizens", Mesa stated that "I have made ... the decision to be a candidate for the presidency of the State. And I do so for a very clear reason, because this is a time of historical inflection, because we are at the beginning, on the threshold of a new time".[176] He further outlined his intention to form "a citizen movement" which would break "the exhausted cycle" of over a decade of MAS rule.[177] Mesa's announcement was hailed by various opposition groups, including leaders both the National Unity Front (UN) and the Social Democratic Movement (MDS), who signaled their hopes of sealing an alliance with the FRI.[178]

Leader of Civic Community edit

On 24 October, La Paz Mayor Luis Revilla announced that his Sovereignty and Liberty (SOL.bo) civic group had decided to support Mesa's candidacy.[179] After a 26-minute tour through the Central Urban Park of La Paz on 30 October, Mesa and Revilla announced to the media that they had agreed to form a coalition between the two parties.[180] The agreement was formalized the following day[181] and registered with the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) on 13 November 2018 under the name Civic Community (CC). The alliance initially included the FRI, SOL.bo, and over 50 citizens platforms.[182] However, CC failed to gather a fully unified opposition pact as UN and MDS formalized their own alliance while other parties registered individually.[183] Jhonny Fernández, leader of UCS, explained that sealing a deal was difficult because the FRI was "not interested in working with leaders who were in political and administrative positions in previous governments".[184]

2019 presidential election edit

 
Annulled 2019 departmental election results.

One of the agreements made by Revilla and Mesa was that the latter would be free to nominate his running mate.[185] On 27 November, Mesa announced that Gustavo Pedraza, his former minister of sustainable development, would accompany him as his vice-presidential candidate.[186] Civic Community opened its electoral campaign in Tarija with a "door to door" canvassing drive and the announcement of a national tour through the country.[187][188] One of Mesa's main campaign tactics was to denounce Morales' bid for a fourth term as illegal due to the fact that voters rejected abolishing term limits in 2016.[189] In that vein, he promoted the strengthening of democratic institutions and additionally ran on environmental protection and addressing corruption.[190]

Crisis: Mesa calls fraud edit

General elections were held on 20 October. By the following day, with a provisional count of eighty-three percent of ballots, Morales and Mesa appeared poised for a second round in December. Mesa hailed his movement's "unquestionable triumph"[f] and swiftly took steps to gather the endorsements of the other opposition parties for the "definitive triumph" in the runoff.[193] Shortly after, however, he expressed concern that the government's official live count had paralyzed at 27.14 percent and called for civic mobilizations and opposition demonstrations before the TSE and its departmental branches to avoid suspected fraud.[194] After a full day without live results, the TSE released its updated count, which placed Morales at 46.86 percent and Mesa at 36.72 percent, with ninety-five percent of votes tallied. Such an outcome gave the president an over ten-point lead by a margin of just 0.1 percent, sufficient to circumvent a runoff.[g] Mesa denounced the unexpected result as "distorted and rigged" and alleged "a gigantic fraud underway". As a result, he called for his supporters to "permanently mobilize" until a second round was agreed to.[196][197] On 3 November, in the midst of an increasingly unsustainable political situation, Mesa insisted on the resignation of the members of the TSE and the convocation of fresh general elections under the supervision of new electoral authorities, rejecting a second round as untenable while at the same time implicitly refusing to support the more radical demands from Santa Cruz civic leaders like Luis Fernando Camacho that Morales resign.[198] By 10 November, however, Mesa had joined the call for Morales to step aside "if he has an iota of patriotism left".[199] The day before that, he rejected Morales' call for dialogue with the opposition, stating: "I have nothing to negotiate".[200]

After twenty days of continuous demonstrations and with his grip on the country slipping, Morales, together with his vice president, announced his abdication on 10 November.[201] After a series of ensuing resignations that exhausted the presidential line of succession followed by two days of uncertainty, opposition senator Jeanine Áñez was proclaimed, first, president of the Senate and, through that, president of the State. Two days later, Mesa gave his support to the transitional government but assured that his alliance would not participate in it in order to focus its attention on soon-to-be called elections.[202] On 8 June 2021, Áñez testified before the Prosecutor's Office that Mesa had blocked the assumption of a MAS legislator to the presidency during the 2019 crisis. During extra-legislative meetings held to discuss a solution to the serious issues facing the country, then-president of the Senate Adriana Salvatierra, anticipating the possible resignation of Morales, raised her claim to constitutional succession and asked if the opposition would accept it. According to Áñez: "Mr. [Antonio] Quiroga calls Mr. Carlos Mesa by phone to consult him, and he replies that the public would not accept that succession [because] the protests would continue". Salvatierra announced her resignation an hour after Morales issued his.[203][204] Mesa did not comment on Áñez's testimony but in October affirmed that, at meetings sponsored by the Catholic Church and European Union, Salvatierra never raised her right to take office. He also called back to January 2020 when she reported to Los Tiempos that her resignation had been part of a political agreement made with Morales.[205]

 
2020 departmental election results.

2020 presidential election edit

A month after the establishment of the transitional government, Mesa confirmed that he would stand as a candidate in the rerun general elections.[206] Despite initial hopes of leading a unified front against the MAS, Mesa's campaign quickly came up against multiple presidential hopefuls, including the candidacy of President Áñez herself, which he considered a "great mistake".[207] On 3 February, a total of seven opposition fronts were registered for the new elections, including Mesa's Civic Community as well as Áñez's Juntos alliance, Luis Fernando Camacho's Creemos, and Libre21 of Jorge Quiroga, among other minor parties.[208] The fracturing of the opposition risked the dispersion of the vote and, though the various parties consolidated with the withdrawal of Áñez and Quiroga in the final weeks and days of the election cycle, Mesa's campaign was hampered nonetheless.[209][210]

In the elections of 18 October, these factors contributed to the victory of the MAS and its candidate Luis Arce in the first round. Mesa came in second with 28.83 percent, having lost a significant percentage of the vote to Camacho, who came in third with fourteen percent.[211] Mesa conceded defeat the day after the election and noted his coalition's position as the head of the opposition in the Legislative Assembly.[212] Analysts have attributed Mesa's electoral defeat to the "passive" nature of his campaign. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Mesa's campaign remained largely virtual and failed to reach out to social sectors. At the same time, external factors such as the unpopularity of the interim government and the candidacy of Camacho, which siphoned support from Santa Cruz, contributed to Mesa's loss.[213]

Ideology and personality edit

Political positions edit

Texas A&M political analyst Diego von Vacano stated that, since his reentry into politics, Mesa has "moved to the left", largely due to the fact that "Morales shifted the entire spectrum of Bolivian politics to the left". In 2020, Mesa was the only presidential candidate who expressed a willingness to open a national discussion on issues such as gay marriage, abortion, and marijuana legalization.[214] Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue—of which Mesa is a member—describes Mesa as a "centrist committed to democratic values, who understands the importance of reconciliation as a condition for moving forward".[215] Personally, Mesa states that in previous years he would have considered himself a social democrat but that he no longer subscribes to any singular ideological viewpoint. At the same time, he asserts that he is not "at all from the right and of the 70s Marxist leftism, less so".[189] In an interview with El País of Tarija, Mesa affirmed that "I don't think it matters if I'm from the left, center, or right".[216]

Mesa credits his schooling at a Jesuit institution as having "always been very strong in my vision of the spiritual" but states that he has been "skeptical about religious issues for several years, the more I have delved into the subject more deeply".[217] In late 2018, he proposed the enactment of a law that would guarantee the separation of church and state as prescribed by the 2009 Constitution.[218]

In international relations, Mesa has opened up the possibility of good relations with any nation regardless of political ideology so long as they are in the "best benefit for Bolivia" and within the framework of "respect [for] democracy and human rights". He has advocated for the resumption of bilateral relations with the United States and the expansion of economic agreements with China and Russia.[219][220] When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Mesa decried the act as "imperialist" and called on the government to release an official condemnation.[221]

Mesa has advocated for judicial reform within the country and blamed the MAS for perverting justice to the point that it has "become a danger to human rights". In particular, he pointed to the multitude of political prisoners held by the government and the harsh prosecution of infractions committed by opposition politicians compared to those of the ruling party.[222] After the Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts for Bolivia concluded a lack of judicial independence, Mesa proposed a ninety-day judicial reform plan entailing amendments to the Constitution and the organic law of the Prosecutor's Office and modifications to the system of electing magistrates and appointing national and departmental prosecutors.[223] In February 2022, CC proposed a judicial reform bill that would amend nine articles of the Constitution to guarantee judicial independence.[224]

On environmental issues, Mesa pledged to better guarantee the protection of the country's rainforests against external issues such as the fires that affected it in 2019. He also opposes the expansion of agricultural land into protected areas but has promised to seek solutions that harmonize progress and development with environmental protection.[225] In 2019 and 2020, the non-profit organization Sachamama, in partnership with leading environmental groups like the WWF, placed Mesa on its list of "The 100 Latinos Most Committed to Climate Action".[226][227] Together with Juan Carlos Enríquez, Ramiro Molina Barrios, and Marcos Loayza, he produced Planeta Bolivia, a series of five documentaries covering crucial environmental challenges facing the country in the twenty-first century. In 2017, it was screened at the 13th Inkafest, Peru's mountain film festival in Arequipa.[228]

Personality edit

José Lizaure, official photographer of the presidency, describes Mesa as "methodical" and recounts that as president, he would break protocols and leave the Palacio Quemado to "greet people" on the street.[229] Upon his assumption to the presidency in 2003, Lupe Cajías described Mesa as someone who "is humble ... [and] accepts his mistakes and tries to rectify them" but also noted that he was "naïve and too sincere. He puts his cards on the table when in politics you have to know how to be calculating".[230] This sentiment was echoed by José Antonio Quiroga, one of Mesa's close friends and collaborators, who stated that he was a "politician without a party", granting him "enormous autonomy" but limiting his proposals to his personal ability. As noted by La Pública, Mesa's quality as an intellectual and academic makes him able to "talk about everything"; however, "he tends to surround himself with a very small team of personal collaborators". For this reason, many in the press have described him as "distant" or "arrogant". During his 2019 and 2020 presidential bids, Mesa was noted as one of the few politicians who had adapted to the use of social media for campaigning, frequently broadcasting live on Facebook and Twitter to address his supporters and respond to questions.[161]

Electoral history edit

Year Office Party Alliance First round Second round Result Ref.
Votes % P. Votes % P.
2002 Vice president Independent MNR-MBL 624,126 22.5% 1st 84 54.19% 1st[h] Won [231]
2019 President Revolutionary Left Front Civic Community 2,240,920 36.51% 2nd Eliminated Annulled [232]
2020 Revolutionary Left Front Civic Community 1,775,943 28.83% 2nd Eliminated Lost [233]
Source: Plurinational Electoral Organ | Electoral Atlas

Distinctions edit

National edit

External videos
Recipients of the Order of the Sun
 
President Alejandro Toledo decorates Mesa and his parents with the Order of the Sun of Peru
  Discursos - Condecoraciones al Sr. José Mesa y Teresa Gisbert
Award or decoration Country Date
  Grand Collar of the Order of the Condor of the Andes   Bolivia 2003–2005
Source: Curriculum Vitae, Carlos Mesa

Foreign edit

Award or decoration Country Date
  Officer's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany   Germany 1987
  Officer of the Order of Rio Branco   Brazil 1990
  Grand Cross of the Order pro Merito Melitensi   Malta 2002
  Grand Cross with Diamonds of the Order of the Sun of Peru   Peru 2004
  Grand Collar of the Order of San Carlos   Colombia
  Collar of the Order of the Aztec Eagle   Mexico 2005
Source: Curriculum Vitae, Carlos Mesa

Filmography edit

Year Title Credited as
Director Executive Producer
1977 I am the Vampire of my Heart Yes No
1988 Great Power, Heaven and Hell Yes No
1995[234] Jonah and the Pink Whale No Yes
2009[235] Bolivia XX Century[i] Yes No
2016[236] Planet Bolivia No Yes
Source: Curriculum Vitae, Carlos Mesa

Publications edit

Books edit

  • Mesa Gisbert, Carlos D. (1982). El Cine Boliviano Según Luis Espinal (in Spanish). La Paz: Editorial Don Bosco.
  • ——————————— (1983). Presidentes de Bolivia: Entre Urnas y Fusiles (in Spanish) (1st ed.). La Paz: Editorial Gisbert.
  • ——————————— (1985). La Aventura del Cine Boliviano, 1952–1985 (in Spanish). La Paz: Editorial Gisbert.
  • ——————————— (1993). De Cerca, Una Década de Conversaciones en Democracia (in Spanish). La Paz: Banco Boliviano Americano, Periodistas Asociados Televisión, and ILDIS.
  • ——————————— (1994). La Epopeya del Fútbol Boliviano 1896–1993 (in Spanish). La Paz: Federación Boliviana de Fútbol and Periodistas Asociados Televisión.
  • ——————————— (1995). Territorios de Libertad (in Spanish). La Paz: Banco BISA and Periodistas Asociados Televisión.
  • ——————————— (2000). La Espada en la Palabra (in Spanish). La Paz: Editorial Aguilar. ISBN 978-99905-2-158-0.
  • ——————————— (2008). Presidencia Sitiada: Memorias de mi Gobierno (in Spanish) (1st, 2nd, and 3rd ed.). La Paz: Plural Editores and Fundación Comunidad. ISBN 978-99954-1-122-0.
  • ——————————— (2008). Un gobierno de Ciudadanos (in Spanish). La Paz: Plural Editores and Fundación Comunidad. ISBN 978-99954-1-123-7.
  • ——————————— (2012). La Paz Golf Club 100 Años de Historia (in Spanish). La Paz Golf Club.
  • ——————————— (2013). La Sirena y el Charango, Ensayo sobre el Mestizaje (in Spanish) (1st and 2nd ed.). La Paz: Editorial Gisbert and Fundación Comunidad. ISBN 978-99954-862-2-8.
  • ——————————— (2014). Breve Historia de las Políticas Públicas en Bolivia (in Spanish) (1st ed.). La Paz: Editorial Gisbert. ISBN 978-99954-862-9-7.
  • ——————————— (2014). Soliloquio del Conquistador (in Spanish) (1st ed.). La Paz: Editorial Edaf and Universidad de las Américas Puebla. ISBN 978-84-414-3416-5.
  • ——————————— (2016). La Historia del Mar Boliviano (in Spanish). La Paz: Editorial Gisbert. ISBN 978-99974-878-7-2.
  • ——————————— (2017). Bolivia 1982–2006 Democracia (in Spanish) (1st and 2nd ed.). La Paz: Editorial Gisbert. ISBN 978-99974-917-3-2.

Co-authored edit

  • Mesa Gisbert, Carlos D.; Palacios, Beatriz; Sanjinés, Jorge; von Vacano, Arturo (1979). Cine Boliviano del Realizador al Crítico (in Spanish). La Paz: Editorial Gisbert.
  • ———————————; de Mesa, José; Gisbert, Teresa; Vásquez, Humberto (1983). Manual de Historia de Bolivia (in Spanish) (2nd ed.). La Paz: Editorial Gisbert. OCLC 10711672.
  • ———————————; Rueda Peña, Mario (1991). Un Debate Entre Gitanos (in Spanish). La Paz: Banco Boliviano Americano and Periodistas Asociados Televisión.
  • ———————————; de Mesa, José; Gisbert, Teresa (1997). Historia de Bolivia (in Spanish) (1st ed.). La Paz: Editorial Gisbert.

Coordinated edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Bolivian government did not specify when Mesa's term as spokesman ended. In response to a question on the matter issued on 11 October, Foreign Minister Diego Pary Rodríguez stated that "the ruling in the Court has concluded on the maritime claim", implying that Mesa's functions ceased on that date.[1]
  2. ^ In Spanish orthography, the paternal surname is de Mesa.[2] The nobiliary particle de is omitted by most publications and by Mesa himself.
  3. ^ It has been recorded that until 1989, Mesa's positions were in favor of the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement—the party of Paz Estenssoro and later Sánchez de Lozada—in 66.7 percent of cases. During the run of De Cerca, Sánchez de Lozada was one of the most frequent guests on the program, with fifteen appearances. Still, Oscar Eid and Jaime Paz Zamora—two of Sánchez de Lozada's primary political opponents—were also recurring guests with six appearances each. As noted by Página Siete: "The data measure Mesa's sympathies, but also illustrate his condition as a journalist, forced to be plural and invite even those who did not like him to speak".[17]
  4. ^ Mesa contradicts this, stating that, on the day of the Convention, Sánchez Berzaín had specifically brought in René Joaquino from Potosí as a backup candidate in the event that he "ran" at the last minute. Joaquino confirmed that he was present on that date but states he was only there to confirm a previous rejection of the offer.[24]
  5. ^ The MAS participated in the formulation of questions two and three of the referendum.[83]
  6. ^ The move to a second round was considered especially significant as it was the first time Morales failed to achieve a first round victory with over fifty percent support since being first elected in 2005.[191][192]
  7. ^ In Bolivia, a second round is avoided by one candidate either reaching fifty percent of the vote or achieving a plurality with ten percent more votes than the next closest competitor.[195]
  8. ^ Second round by parliamentary vote.
  9. ^ Also a writer and the presenter.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Canciller no responde si Carlos Mesa sigue siendo vocero de la demanda marítima". Los Tiempos (in Spanish). 11 October 2018. from the original on 17 December 2021. Retrieved 16 December 2021.
  2. ^ "Padrón electoral biométrico y militancia: Carlos Diego de Mesa Gisbert". yoparticipo.oep.org.bo (in Spanish). La Paz: Plurinational Electoral Organ. 24 January 2021. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
  3. ^ Cárdenas, José Arturo (18 October 2020). "Carlos Mesa, un reincidente en la política boliviana que pelea por un balotaje". Infobae (in Spanish). Buenos Aires. from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  4. ^ Donaire, Ginés (9 February 2005). "El presidente de Bolivia, Hijo Adoptivo de Alcalá la Real por sus orígenes". El País (in Spanish). Madrid. ISSN 1134-6582. from the original on 9 December 2021. Retrieved 16 December 2021.
  5. ^ Bouysse-Cassagne, Thèrése (1 March 2018). "In Memoriam: Teresa Gisbert (1926–2018)". ifea.hypotheses.org (in French). from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  6. ^ "¿Quién fue Teresa Gisbert de Mesa?". El Deber (in Spanish). Santa Cruz de la Sierra. 19 February 2018. from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  7. ^ "Fallece José Mesa Figueroa, notable historiador del país". Opinión (in Spanish). Cochabamba. 23 July 2010. from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  8. ^ Mesa, Carlos (27 December 2020). "50 años después... ¡los que más, los que más nos divertimos!". Página Siete (in Spanish). La Paz. from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  9. ^ "Quién es Carlos Mesa, el primer adversario en hacerle sombra a Evo Morales que podría presidir Bolivia". El Cronista (in Spanish). Buenos Aires. 21 October 2019. from the original on 28 November 2019. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  10. ^ a b c "Curriculum Vitae de CARLOS D. MESA GISBERT | Ex-Presidente de la República de Bolivia". Biblioteca Virtual Carlos D. Mesa (in Spanish). La Paz. 24 November 2017. from the original on 9 June 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  11. ^ Rojas, Fernanda (12 October 2019). "Carlos Mesa: El perfil desconocido del rival de Evo Morales". La Tercera (in Spanish). Santiago. from the original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  12. ^ Cazas, Anahí (8 July 2016). "Cinemateca festeja 40 años con reconocimientos a Mesa y Susz". Página Siete (in Spanish). La Paz. from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  13. ^ Mesa Gisbert 1993, pp. 1–2
  14. ^ Mesa Gisbert 1993, p. 3
  15. ^ Mesa Gisbert 1993, pp. 3–4
  16. ^ Mesa Gisbert 1993, pp. 4–5
  17. ^ a b Archondo, Rafael (16 August 2019). "La historia de PAT". Página Siete (in Spanish). from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  18. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2010, pp. 31–32
  19. ^ Forero, Juan (26 February 2006). "The (American) Selling of the (Bolivian) President, 2002". The New York Times. Bogotá. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  20. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2010, p. 32
  21. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2010, pp. 33–38
  22. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2010, pp. 40–41
  23. ^ "Balcázar: En algunos casos, sabemos quién le entregaba a Mesa y cuánto dinero". Urgente.bo (in Spanish). La Paz. 2 August 2019. from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  24. ^ "Joaquino dice que estuvo en casa de Goni para rechazar una candidatura". Erbol | Archivo (in Spanish). 11 July 2014. from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  25. ^ Martínez, Emilio (26 July 2019). "Canal de Mesa recibió 6 millones de Bs., coincidiendo con información sobre 'venta de candidatura'". eju!. Santa Cruz de la Sierra. from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  26. ^ "Mesa sobre acusación de lavado de dinero: De haber sido un hecho irregular, ya prescribió". Los Tiempos (in Spanish). Cochabamba. 26 September 2019. from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  27. ^ "Elecciones generales: 'Goni' y Carlos Mesa son los candidatos del MNR". Agencia de Noticias Fides (in Spanish). La Paz. 3 February 2002. from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  28. ^ Assies & Salman 2003, pp. 1–2
  29. ^ Enver, Andrew (2 August 2002). "Rivals in Bolivia Forge Alliance". Los Angeles Times. La Paz. from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  30. ^ Faiola, Anthony (5 August 2002). "Bolivia's Ex-President Regains Post". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. from the original on 13 January 2022. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  31. ^ "Mesa: Unidad de Lucha contra la Corrupción para realizar su trabajo". Agencia de Noticias Fides (in Spanish). La Paz. 20 August 2002. from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  32. ^ "Anticorrupción: Lupe Cajías presentará su primera evaluación mensual". Agencia de Noticias Fides (in Spanish). La Paz. 29 September 2002. from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  33. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2010, p. 56
  34. ^ "Bolivia | Legal Cooperation Department" (PDF). Organization of American States (in Spanish). (PDF) from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  35. ^ "Cajías dice que apenas le hizo un rasguño a la corrupción". Agencia de Noticias Fides (in Spanish). La Paz. 11 August 2003. from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  36. ^ Siles, Andrés Manuel (6 November 2019). "Discurso y corrupción". La Razón (in Spanish). La Paz. from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  37. ^ Rojas Ríos, César (2007). Democracia de alta tensión: conflictividad y cambio social en la Bolivia del siglo XXI (in Spanish). La Paz: Plural Editores. p. 108. ISBN 978-99954-1-075-9. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  38. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2010, p. 64
  39. ^ Crespo, Luis (10 February 2003). "Bolivia: impuesto polemico". BBC Mundo (in Spanish). London. from the original on 19 December 2021. Retrieved 19 December 2021.
  40. ^ Gori, Graham (13 February 2003). "14 killed in Bolivian riots". The Guardian. London. Associated Press. from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  41. ^ Mesa Gisbert, Carlos D. (12 February 2013). "12 de Febrero de 2003. Diez Años Después. Mi Testimonio". carlosdmesa.com (in Spanish). from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  42. ^ "U.N. GAOR, 58th Sess., 9th plen. mtg., U.N. Doc A/58/PV.9". undocs.org. New York City: United Nations. 24 September 2003. p. 26. from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  43. ^ Duran Conde, Jhouselinne Sandra (18 June 2019). "Octubre Negro y los puros de Carlos Mesa". La Época (in Spanish). from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  44. ^ Layme, Beatriz (13 March 2018). "Mesa advirtió a Goni en 2003: 'Los muertos te van a enterrar'". Página Siete (in Spanish). La Paz. from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  45. ^ "Carlos Mesa advirtió a Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada 'los muertos te van a enterrar'". Los Tiempos (in Spanish). Cochabamba. 25 November 2009. from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  46. ^ "Vicepresidente retira su apoyo al Presidente de Bolivia". Plainview Daily Herald (in Spanish). 13 October 2003. from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  47. ^ "Mesa no volverá, no ayudará a la polarización y pide diálogo patriótico". Agencia de Noticias Fides (in Spanish). La Paz. 16 October 2003. from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  48. ^ a b Atahuichi, Rubén (17 October 2021). "En 2003, Carlos Mesa juró bajo sucesión constitucional". La Razón (in Spanish). La Paz. from the original on 5 November 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  49. ^ "Mesa, el periodista presidente". BBC Mundo (in Spanish). London. 18 October 2003. from the original on 14 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
  50. ^ "MNR: No hubo conspiración golpista contra Goni, pero Mesa fue desleal". Agencia de Noticias Fides (in Spanish). La Paz. 22 October 2004. from the original on 14 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
  51. ^ a b c Ortiz, Pablo (13 October 2013). "Insurrección de octubre: Goni se fue antes de ser colgado y Mesa esperó su momento para ser presidente". El Deber (in Spanish). Santa Cruz de la Sierra. from the original on 14 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021 – via eju!.
  52. ^ Mendieta Romero, Gonzalo (25 February 2018). . Página Siete (in Spanish). La Paz. Archived from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  53. ^ Jeter, Jon (18 October 2003). "Protests Force Bolivian Leader to Resign". The Washington Post. from the original on 13 January 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
  54. ^ Assies & Salman 2003, p. 66
  55. ^ Rohter, Larry (18 October 2003). "Bolivian Leader Resigns and His Vice President Steps In". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  56. ^ "Sin urnas ni fusiles Carlos Mesa asume el reto de unir al país". Agencia de Noticias Fides (in Spanish). La Paz. 17 October 2003. from the original on 14 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
  57. ^ a b c Relea, Francesc (18 October 2003). "El nuevo presidente de Bolivia formará un Gobierno sin presencia de partidos políticos". El País (in Spanish). Madrid. ISSN 1134-6582. from the original on 15 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  58. ^ Assies & Salman 2003, pp. 66–67
  59. ^ Arrarás & Deheza 2005, p. 162
  60. ^ a b Gray, Kevin (17 October 2003). "Mesa presidente de Bolivia tras renuncia de Sánchez de Lozada". Laredo Morning Times (in Spanish). from the original on 14 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
  61. ^ "Sánchez de Lozada envió carta de renuncia al Congreso". El Universo (in Spanish). Guayaquil. 18 October 2003. from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  62. ^ "From here to 2007, without falling?". The Economist. Cochabamba and La Paz. 22 January 2004. ISSN 0013-0613. from the original on 9 January 2022. Retrieved 16 December 2021.
  63. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2010, pp. 118–119
  64. ^ "'Ni olvido, ni venganza', Mesa promete justicia en El Alto". Agencia de Noticias Fides (in Spanish). La Paz. 18 October 2003. from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  65. ^ Crespo, Luis (19 October 2003). Written at La Paz. "Mesa: 'ni olvido ni venganza'". BBC Mundo (in Spanish). London. from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  66. ^ Azcui, Mabel (14 October 2004). Written at La Paz. "El Parlamento de Bolivia autoriza un juicio político contra el ex presidente Sánchez de Lozada". El País (in Spanish). Madrid. ISSN 1134-6582. from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  67. ^ "Histórico juicio a ex presidente de Bolivia". El Universo (in Spanish). Guayaquil. 15 October 2004. from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  68. ^ Medinaceli, Rubén (20 February 2019). . Página Siete (in Spanish). La Paz. Archived from the original on 19 December 2021. Retrieved 19 December 2021.
  69. ^ Staff writer (1 February 2004). Written at La Paz. "Mesa lanza programa económico con austeridad y nuevos impuestos". El Universo (in Spanish). Guayaquil. EFE. from the original on 22 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  70. ^ "Bolivia presenta plan económico". BBC Mundo (in Spanish). London. 2 February 2004. from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  71. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2010, p. 151
  72. ^ "Bolivia Government budget deficit". countryeconomy.com. from the original on 22 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  73. ^ Mesa Gisbert, Carlos D. (31 July 2004). "Decreto Supremo N° 27650". Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia (in Spanish). La Paz. from the original on 23 December 2021. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
  74. ^ Soto Ríos 2007, pp. 140–141
  75. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2010, p. 172
  76. ^ Quiroga Ramírez, Jorge (2 August 2002). "Ley N° 2410". Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia (in Spanish). La Paz. from the original on 22 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
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  223. ^ "CC propone reformar la justicia del país en 90 días e iniciar con el cambio del fiscal general". Agencia de Noticias Fides (in Spanish). La Paz. 23 August 2021. from the original on 24 February 2022. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
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  227. ^ "The 100 Latinos Most Committed to Climate Action". sachamama.org. 2020. from the original on 15 April 2021. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
carlos, mesa, colombian, olympic, cyclist, cyclist, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, mesa, second, maternal, family, name, gisbert, carlos, diego, mesa, gisbert, spanish, pronunciation, ˈkaɾlos, ˈðjeɣo, ˈmesa, xisˈβeɾt, born, august, 1953, bolivi. For the Colombian Olympic cyclist see Carlos Mesa cyclist In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Mesa and the second or maternal family name is Gisbert Carlos Diego de Mesa Gisbert b Spanish pronunciation ˈkaɾlos ˈdjeɣo ˈmesa xisˈbeɾt born 12 August 1953 is a Bolivian historian journalist and politician who served as the 63rd president of Bolivia from 2003 to 2005 As an independent politician he previously served as the 37th vice president of Bolivia from 2002 to 2003 under Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada and was the international spokesman for Bolivia s lawsuit against Chile in the International Court of Justice from 2014 to 2018 A member of the Revolutionary Left Front he has served as leader of Civic Community the largest opposition parliamentary group in Bolivia since 2018 Carlos MesaOCA OSP OMAA OMMOfficial portrait 200463rd President of BoliviaIn office 17 October 2003 9 June 2005Vice PresidentVacantPreceded byGonzalo Sanchez de LozadaSucceeded byEduardo Rodriguez Veltze37th Vice President of BoliviaIn office 6 August 2002 17 October 2003PresidentGonzalo Sanchez de LozadaPreceded byJorge QuirogaSucceeded byAlvaro Garcia LineraLeader of Civic CommunityIncumbentAssumed office 13 November 2018Preceded byAlliance establishedOfficial Representative of Boliviafor the Maritime ClaimAd honoremIn office 28 April 2014 1 October 2018 a PresidentEvo MoralesPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byPosition dissolvedPersonal detailsBornCarlos Diego de Mesa Gisbert 1953 08 12 12 August 1953 age 70 La Paz BoliviaPolitical partyRevolutionary Left Front 2018 present Other politicalaffiliationsIndependent before 2018 SpousesPatricia Flores Soto m 1975 div 1978 wbr Elvira Salinas Gamarra m 1980 wbr ChildrenBorja Ignacio GuiomarParentsJose de Mesa Teresa GisbertEducationSan Calixto SchoolSan Estanislao de Kotska SchoolAlma materComplutense University of MadridHigher University of San AndresOccupationHistorianjournalistpoliticianAwardsList of awards and honorsSignatureWebsitecarlosdmesa wbr combibliotecavirtualcarlosdmesa wbr comCarlos Mesa s voice source source Academic presentation delivered to a session of the Argentine Council for International Relations 13 March 2019 Born in La Paz Mesa began a twenty three year long journalistic career after graduating from university He rose to national fame in 1983 as the host of De Cerca in which he interviewed prominent figures of Bolivian political and cultural life His popular appeal led former president Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada of the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement MNR to invite him to be his running mate in the 2002 presidential election Though Mesa s moderate left wing sympathies contrasted with centre right policies of the MNR he accepted the offer running as an independent in a hotly contested electoral campaign The Sanchez de Lozada Mesa ticket won the election and on 6 August Mesa took charge of a largely ceremonial office that carried with it few formal powers save for guaranteeing the constitutional line of succession Shortly into his term conflict between Sanchez de Lozada and Mesa arose By October 2003 the increasingly tense situation surrounding the ongoing gas conflict caused a definitive break in relations between the president and vice president leading the latter to announce his withdrawal from government after clashes between protesters and military personnel led to several deaths Crucially Mesa opted not to resign from his vice presidential post and succeeded to the presidency upon Sanchez de Lozada s resignation Mesa assumed office with broadly popular civic support but leading a government without a party base and devoid of organic parliamentary support left him with little room to maneuver as his public policy proposals were severely restricted by the legislature controlled by traditional parties and increasingly organized regional and social movements spearheaded by the cocalero activist and future president Evo Morales As promised he held a national referendum on gas which passed with high margins on all five counts Nonetheless widespread dissatisfaction resurged and his call for a binding referendum on autonomies and the convocation of a constituent assembly to reform the Constitution failed to quell unrest Mesa resigned in June 2005 though not before ensuring that the heads of the two legislative chambers renounced their succession rights facilitating the assumption of the non partisan Supreme Court judge Eduardo Rodriguez Veltze to the presidency With that Mesa withdrew from active politics and returned his focus to various media projects and journalistic endeavors In 2014 despite previous animosity President Evo Morales appointed him as the international spokesman for the country s maritime lawsuit against Chile before the International Court of Justice ICJ a position he held until the final ruling at The Hague in 2018 Mesa s work for the maritime cause propelled him back into the national consciousness and he soon emerged as a viable alternative to Morales as a contender for the presidency even surpassing the president in electoral preference polls Shortly after the ruling by the ICJ Mesa announced his presidential candidacy In the 2019 election Mesa was defeated by Morales who failed to garner a majority but won a wide enough plurality to avoid a runoff However irregularities in the preliminary vote tally prompted Mesa to denounce electoral fraud and call for mass demonstrations ultimately ending in Morales resignation and an ensuing political crisis The following year snap elections were held but numerous postponements and an unpopular transitional government hampered Mesa s campaign resulting in a first round loss to Movement for Socialism MAS candidate Luis Arce Mesa emerged from the election as the head of the largest opposition bloc in a legislature that does not hold a MAS supermajority for the first time in over a decade Contents 1 Early life and career 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Journalistic career 1 2 1 Film critic and archivist 1 2 2 Radio host and producer 1 2 3 Television presenter 1 2 3 1 Foundation of PAT 1 2 4 Press columnist 2 Vice presidency 2002 2003 2 1 Entry into politics 2 2 From no to yes Mesa accepts 2 2 1 The PAT factor 2 2 2 2002 general election 2 3 A frustrated vice presidency 2 3 1 The fight against corruption 2 3 2 Black February 2 4 Black October Mesa pulls out 3 Presidency 2003 2005 3 1 Without ballot boxes or rifles 3 2 Domestic policy 3 2 1 Economy 3 2 2 Judiciary 3 2 3 Constitutional reform 3 2 4 Hydrocarbons and gas 3 2 4 1 2004 gas referendum 3 2 4 2 2005 Hydrocarbons Law 3 2 5 Autonomies 3 3 Foreign policy 3 3 1 Argentina 3 3 2 Chile and the Maritime Demand 3 3 3 Peru 3 4 Definitive resignation 4 Post presidency 2005 2018 4 1 Spokesman for the Maritime Demand 5 Return to politics 2018 present 5 1 Leader of Civic Community 5 1 1 2019 presidential election 5 1 1 1 Crisis Mesa calls fraud 5 1 2 2020 presidential election 6 Ideology and personality 6 1 Political positions 6 2 Personality 7 Electoral history 8 Distinctions 8 1 National 8 2 Foreign 9 Filmography 10 Publications 10 1 Books 10 2 Co authored 10 3 Coordinated 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Footnotes 11 3 Bibliography 12 External links 12 1 Official 12 2 OtherEarly life and career editEarly life and education edit nbsp Mesa with his family in 1965 Carlos Mesa was born on 12 August 1953 in La Paz 3 Through his father Jose de Mesa he is of Spanish descent his grandfather Jose Mesa Sanchez emigrated to Bolivia from Alcala la Real in 1910 Due to his heritage in 2005 the city s council unanimously designated Mesa as the adoptive son of the municipality 4 His mother Teresa Gisbert was of Catalan descent her father and mother emigrated from Barcelona and Alicante 5 Together de Mesa and Gisbert were two of the most prominent Bolivian architects historians and museologists of their time 6 He has three younger siblings Andres Isabel and Teresa Guiomar 7 Between 1959 and 1970 Mesa completed primary and began secondary studies at the all boys private Catholic and Jesuit San Calixto School in the Seguencoma barrio of La Paz 8 In 1970 he traveled abroad to Spain completing his high school education at the San Estanislao de Kotska School in Madrid After graduating Mesa entered the Complutense University of Madrid pursuing majors in political science and letters After three years he returned to Bolivia where he enrolled in the Higher University of San Andres UMSA graduating with a degree in literature in 1978 9 During his stay there in 1974 he directed the UMSA s Faculty of Humanities magazine 10 nbsp Mesa aged 18 as a student at the Complutense University of Madrid At the age of twenty two Mesa married Patricia Flores Soto though they divorced three years later Two years after that on 28 March 1980 he married Elvira Salinas Gamarra a psychologist and environmental consultant with whom he has two children Borja Ignacio and Guiomar 11 Journalistic career edit Film critic and archivist edit On 12 July 1976 while still a student of the UMSA Mesa along with Pedro Susz and Amalia de Gallardo helped found the Bolivian Cinematheque With the support of Renzo Cotta of the Center of Cinematographic Orientation and La Paz Mayor Mario Mercado the group secured a small amount of space on the fifth floor of the La Paz House of Culture in order to start their film archive The first addition to the collection was a short film directed by Jorge Ruiz Laredo about the violinist Jaime Laredo which was donated by the pianist Raul Barragan 12 Along with Susz Mesa served as the cinematheque s executive director from its foundation until 1985 remaining a member of its board of directors after that 10 Radio host and producer edit Mesa s first foray into radio occurred in 1969 concomitantly his first journalistic endeavor Through his father he secured a three month internship for Radio Universo where he would haul portable tape recorders to ministerial press conferences before returning and cutting the recorded material for broadcast use In 1974 with the help of Universo head Lorenzo Carri Mesa became the independent producer and host of a program on Radio Mendez After a brief return to Universo in 1976 Mesa moved on to Radio Metropolitana where together with Roberto Melogno he produced the morning newscast 25 Minutos en el Mundo In 1979 Mesa s meager cinematheque salary pushed him to seek more dedicated journalistic work Together with Carri he joined Radio Cristal owned by Mario Castro The pair s presentational style evolved from simple news coverage to commentary and analysis and finally opinion journalism Abruptly shuttered by the military government of Luis Garcia Meza the station was reopened after his fall and between 1982 and 1985 had grown to become the country s top news network 13 Television presenter edit After a brief stint as sub director of the evening periodical Ultima Hora between 1982 and 1983 Mesa made his first television debut In that period the only major competition to state outlets came from university television Channel 13 Television Universitaria TVU directed by Luis Gonzalez Quintanilla played a particularly important role in the country s political process In 1982 amid the country s democratic transition and the reopening of independent media Gonzalez invited Mesa to a panel on one of TVU s programs Impressed by the young journalist Gonzalez called on him to take charge of a culture themed talk show Though Dialogos en Vivo ran for only three months it proved to be the basis for what later became the program that spotlighted Mesa as a national television personality 14 The name of that program came to be known as De Cerca The concept of the show formulated by Bolivian National Television officials Julio Barragan and Carlos Soria combined formal interviews of Bolivian political figures with a section in which recorded questions from ordinary citizens were relayed by the host to the guest In mid 1983 Mesa was called on to host the show an offer he accepted without question De Cerca premiered on 15 September 1983 with Minister of Planning Roberto Jordan Pando as its first guest The show premiered at a time of a severe hyperinflation crisis in the country Mesa s salary frequently spent long periods through the bureaucracy of the Ministry of Finance often being delivered two or three months late His final payment from the company delivered in July 1985 totaled b 63 5 million due to inflation 15 Save for the eventual removal of prerecorded questions which Mesa stated broke the continuity of the program and also limited the topic of the conversation to excessively circumstantial issues the style and presentation of De Cerca remained largely unchanged for two decades and between four channels lending it a sense of permanence in time Throughout its run the program spotlighted a large majority of the most relevant political actors of the period to be invited onto the show eventually became a mark of national prominence Of those interviewed included every president of the country who governed during the show s run as well as some prior ones with the exception of Victor Paz Estenssoro and Hernan Siles Zuazo neither of whom with few exceptions ever accepted invitations to any television program For Mesa the omission of these two figures was a great void in De Cerca that I will never finish regretting 16 Foundation of PAT edit nbsp Mesa discusses his book Soliloquio del Conquistador at the Miami Book Fair 2014 On 1 August 1990 Mesa together with fellow journalists Mario Espinoza and Amalia Pando and financially assisted by Ximena Valdivia launched Associated Journalists Television Periodistas Asociados Television PAT The concept of the network then an audiovisual production company came from the hope of establishing a newscast free of government oversight and censors Starting from 15 September PAT began broadcasting public news coverage to the country In 1992 the government of Jaime Paz Zamora closed the State television company in favor of a contract with PAT ratified by the succeeding government of Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada Despite the State s financial support Mesa s team of journalists took great care to maintain a level of objectivity in their reporting Responding to questions regarding bias Pando admits that both she and Mesa supported many of the policies of Sanchez de Lozada s first term but rejects the notion that this constituted a tie to the government c Despite its early success a compounding set of issues began to mount onto the channel Viewing the newscast as an outlet for the opposition the government of Hugo Banzer initiated a boycott This coupled with an economic recession and a series of well done but largely unpopular new programs sent PAT into a financial crisis According to Pando Mesa s vice presidential candidacy had devastating consequences for the channel s credibility as an independent news source In 2007 the company was sold to businessman Abdallah Daher who thereafter sold it to Comercializadora Multimedia del Sur Only the name remains with the original channel 17 Press columnist edit Mesa s longest held editorial post was as a regular contributor to the sports supplements of the morning papers Hoy Presencia Viva and La Prensa he published for these outlets between 1976 and 2002 Between 1979 and 1986 he worked as a film critic for the La Paz prints Apertura 1979 Hoy 1981 1982 and Ultima Hora 1983 1986 From 2010 to 2017 he remained a regular editor at large for the morning newspapers El Deber El Nuevo Sur El Potosi Correo del Sur La Palabra La Patria Los Tiempos Pagina Siete and Sol de Pando In addition Mesa has written columns for international outlets such as the Spanish Diario 16 and El Pais the American Foreign Policy and Germany s Der Spiegel 10 Vice presidency 2002 2003 editEntry into politics edit As a prominent journalist in the field of politics the prospect of actually participating in affairs of state was an option often proposed by outside voices but which Mesa a staunch independent despite his moderate left wing sympathies routinely refused to consider His first experience refusing the call to serve came in 1986 when President Paz Estenssoro invited him to be a component of his cabinet as minister of information Despite his stated admiration of the president Mesa declined the offer the following day citing his perceived inadequacy to hold the position In the ensuing years on various occasions Mesa declined offers by various parties to run for vice president mayor of La Paz or senator In the 1993 election then candidate Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada had placed Mesa on a list of pre candidates for the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement MNR s vice presidential nomination The Aymara activist Victor Hugo Cardenas was ultimately chosen and elected as the country s first indigenous vice president 18 From no to yes Mesa accepts edit nbsp Mesa served as vice president under Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada but broke with him after the government repressions of October 2003 With elections set for June 2002 the possibility of being presented as a political candidate was once again laid on Mesa Seeking a turnaround after its electoral defeat in the 1997 general election the MNR opted to renominate its national chief ex president Sanchez de Lozada as the party s presidential candidate For his new bid Sanchez de Lozada surrounded his campaign with American political consultants of the Greenberg Carville Shrum GCS strategy group who employed focus groups and public opinion polls to revitalize his public image 19 In January Mesa received a call from the ex president asking him to meet with members of the GCS team to discuss the results of a recent poll Mesa s suspicions that the subject of the survey would regard political candidates were confirmed when two consultants Jeremy Rosner and Amy Webber met him at his office at PAT presenting the journalist with results showing him with the highest favorability among a list of a dozen national figures 20 For Mesa the festering social conflicts of twenty first century Bolivia necessitated a political renewal Paz Zamora and Sanchez de Lozada were history their political cycle had finished and they were prolonging it artificially and unnecessarily If he were to become a contestant in electoral politics he reasoned it would be under a movement of his own design and certainly not as vice president a post he described as the stupidest position of all An office with a single objective that of succession with few clear powers In meetings with Sanchez de Lozada Mesa expressed this point emphasizing that the MNR required younger generations among its ranks and suggesting himself as a possible alternative presidential candidate an idea that the MNR shot down due to his political and economic inexperience 21 Among other considerations for Mesa were the notion of ending an almost twenty five year career in journalism including the abandonment of PAT and the perceived adverse effects assuming the vice presidency would have on his family For these reasons on 31 January Mesa informed Sanchez de Lozada that he would not join the ex president as his running mate Two days later however Mesa was called to one last meeting with Carlos Sanchez Berzain the MNR s campaign manager who outlined three final arguments for consideration Sanchez de Lozada was the only candidate with the capacity to alleviate the ongoing economic crisis Mesa could not continue in his comfortable position commentating on the sidelines of politics the MNR s campaign team considered the inclusion or exclusion of Mesa as the deciding factor in the party s electoral outcome It was either with me or with me and everything else was a disaster These points renewed doubts in Mesa who ultimately apprehensively accepted the invitation just a day before the National Convention of the MNR was set to announce its presidential binomial 22 The PAT factor edit According to Mauricio Balcazar former minister and son in law to Sanchez de Lozada the MNR paid Mesa over US 800 000 in ten installments between the 2002 campaign and October 2003 in exchange for his vice presidential candidacy As alleged by Balcazar on the day of the MNR Convention Mesa demanded the payment and an initial guarantee check of US 200 000 for his television channel PAT threatening to withdraw his nomination if the party did not comply For Balcazar this constituted extortion although he did not realize it at the time because the MNR had no time to seek an alternative candidate 23 d An investigation carried out by analyst Carlos Valverde uncovered documents proving deposits totaling Bs6 million US 831 454 into the bank account of PAT starting in mid 2002 and ending in October 2003 A majority of the transactions were recorded as loans to PAT by the Itaca company the owner of ninety nine percent of the channel s share quotas in effect a self grant that raised money laundering concerns 25 For his part Mesa refused to make a definitive statement on the allegations during his 2019 presidential bid asserting that he would not respond to the dirty war being waged by his electoral opponents At the same time he affirmed that it was based on false testimonies on false investigations and on the fact that if it was an irregular act it was carried out more than sixteen years ago 26 2002 general election edit Main article 2002 Bolivian general election The MNR closed its Extraordinary National Convention on 3 February with the announcement of Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada as the party s presidential candidate accompanied by Carlos Mesa as his non partisan running mate Accepting the nomination Mesa cited resolving the economic crisis and fighting institutional corruption as the main factors in his decision to join the electoral binomial 27 At first glance election day on 30 June yielded an electoral victory for the Sanchez de Lozada Mesa ticket amid a well conducted and orderly process generally accepted by the contending parties and their supporters But with a plurality of just 22 5 percent the MNR emerged as the only traditional party that could claim a modicum of popular support Second and third place respectively went to the Movement for Socialism MAS IPSP of the indigenous cocalero activist Evo Morales and the New Republican Force NFR of Cochabamba Mayor Manfred Reyes Villa each of them took a twenty percent share of the vote Paz Zamora s Revolutionary Left Movement MIR came fourth with 16 3 percent while Nationalist Democratic Action ADN the party holding the incumbent presidency did not even reach four percent 28 The blow to the country s traditional party system resulted in a tense runoff in which Sanchez de Lozada was forced to form an unlikely coalition with Paz Zamora in order to shore up a majority of congressional support With eighty four votes in their favor Congress elected Sanchez de Lozada and Mesa as the constitutional president and vice president on 4 August taking office two days later 29 30 A frustrated vice presidency edit The fight against corruption edit nbsp Official vice presidential portrait 2002 In keeping with his campaign promise to make fighting corruption the central point of his administration Mesa on 11 August 2002 launched the Technical Unit against Corruption under the leadership of the journalist Lupe Cajias The unit was set as a component of the Vice Presidency operating independently of the Prosecutor s Office 31 In addition to Cajias it was composed of a petite cabinet consisting of Jose Galindo Jorge Cortes and Alfonso Ferrufino 32 On 12 August 2003 the post was refounded as the Secretariat of the Fight against Corruption which Mesa credited to be without doubt the greatest contribution of my vice presidential management 33 Two days after his assumption to the presidency Mesa elevated the secretariat to the high executive level as the Presidential Anticorruption Delegation 34 Mesa s anti corruption efforts were not without criticism A year into her administration Cajias admitted that her team had barely scratched corruption and that the post suffered structural issues 35 One such issue was the lack of coordination between the secretariat and other parts of the judicial system prosecutors annulled various cases presented by her office and the ambiguity of the office s functions eventually relegated it to issuing opinions and periodically publishing public reports on alleged acts of corruption 36 Mesa attributed many of the shortfalls of his anti corruption work to a lack of cooperation from the president One example came in July 2003 when Secretary Cajias issued Report N 13 A contingent of conscripts and 180 soldiers of the Bolivian Army had been illegally forced to work harvesting Macororo on the Santa Monica farm in the Chiquitos Province of Santa Cruz for no wage and in conditions of general servitude 37 The case implicated Minister of Defense Freddy Teodovich and Santa Cruz Prefect Mario Justiniano For this reason on 10 July Mesa met with Sanchez de Lozada to request the dismissal of Teodovich an action the president refused to take because the minister was an influential component of the cabinet and the MNR Mesa considered this a revocation of the president s promise to allow him to freely take anti corruption measures and the incident served to aggravate festering grievances between the two 38 Black February edit Main article 2003 La Paz riots February 2003 presented the first significant ordeal that shook Mesa s confidence in the government On the ninth President Sanchez de Lozada under pressure from the International Monetary Fund to significantly reduce the country s fiscal deficit presented a new tax bill that among other factors imposed a salary tax on workers making a certain threshold of income The response was near universal outrage and a series of protests that after a few days were joined by the National Police Corps 39 40 Given the absence of law enforcement the demonstrations quickly devolved into riots which eventually forced government officials to flee their offices In his account of events Mesa states that what I saw was hell At 5 00 p m on 12 February Mesa sequestered at the president s private residence was informed that the Vice Presidency had been set aflame by vandals an action he describes as my apocalypse It seemed to me that all the illusions of public service I promised on 6 August upon taking office were shattered 41 Black October Mesa pulls out edit Main article Bolivian gas conflict A few days ago my country lived through serious episodes of violence which have forced us to reflect We are aware of the fact that the last twenty one years of democracy the longest uninterrupted period in our history are at stake as we face the legitimate pressure exercised by the marginalized sectors of our society who deserve our attention Loss of trust in these essential elements of democracy is one of the greatest dangers to the future of our society Carlos Mesa Address to the 58th United Nations General Assembly 24 September 2003 42 By September the simmering popular grievances of the time mainly related to the export of natural gas to the United States through Chile had ignited into nationwide social unrest On 12 October Mesa arrived in La Paz for a meeting with the president flying in by helicopter due to the ongoing blockades making accessing the capital by land impossible 43 At 1 34 p m Mesa ate lunch with Sanchez de Lozada at the presidential residence in San Jorge where he pleaded with the president to call a referendum on gas and open up the possibility of a constituent assembly Sanchez de Lozada whom Mesa describes as the most stubborn man I have ever met remained steadfast in his refusal to give in to social demands causing the vice president to snap at him that the dead are going to bury you 44 Amid their heated discussion the government s bloody suppression of demonstrations in El Alto began to count its first deaths Reports of the massacre of protesters which Mesa learned from the media definitively ruptured relations between him and Sanchez de Lozada 45 The following day the vice president publicly withdrew his support for the government In his statement Mesa outlined that the cost of human lives was something that his conscience as a human being cannot tolerate and he implored the government to seek a position of dialogue and establish peace 46 At a press conference held three days later he ratified his refusal to cooperate stating I do not have the courage to kill nor will I have the courage to kill tomorrow For that reason it is impossible to think about my return to government 47 Between the thirteenth and the seventeenth Mesa withdrew to his private residence Crucially however he determined not to resign from the vice presidency He later recounted that the decision came from his memory of the 2001 crisis in Argentina During that time President Fernando de la Rua resigned causing a crisis of succession because Vice President Carlos Alvarez in protest had vacated the office the year prior According to Mesa If there was any value in the position I thought it was precisely guaranteeing democratic continuity in extreme cases 48 Mesa s decision was met with harsh criticism by sectors still loyal to Sanchez de Lozada Among the leadership of the MNR it was made clear that the party was upset with Mr Carlos Mesa while legislators of the MIR accused him of failing to fulfill his duty as a mediator between Congress and the government 49 According to Edgar Zegarra he did not tell us absolutely anything about the decisions he was going to make a fact which the MNR deputy claimed was a sign of deep disloyalty on Mesa s behalf 50 At the same time on 14 October the United States Department of State informed Mesa that the US would not under any circumstances support a possible government headed by him Two days later US Ambassador David N Greenlee personally met with Mesa at his home to request that he return to the government which he refused to do 51 Given that Greenlee recounts asking Mesa that if you can t support the president anymore why don t you resign For the ambassador the question was a philosophical point not a political one but it nonetheless fomented an untrusting relationship between the two At the end of their discussion it was learned that the press had intercepted Greenlee s radio traffic and had gathered outside Mesa s home Before television crews the two spoke of a friendly and constructive conversation though Greenlee states that it wasn t of that kind 52 The following day with it becoming increasingly clear that Sanchez de Lozada would soon step down the Department of State conceded and informed Mesa that the US would support his succession 51 At midday on 17 October Minister of the Presidency Guillermo Justiniano called Mesa to inform him that the president would soon resign and invited him to discuss conditions surrounding his departure Mere hours later however Justiniano called again to tell Mesa that Sanchez de Lozada had already left the Palacio Quemado At 6 00 p m Hormando Vaca Diez and Oscar Arrien presidents of the Senate and Chamber of Deputies visited Mesa to inform him that they would soon accept the president s resignation and that constitutional succession corresponded to him At the same time they insisted that he pledge to stay in office for the mandated term ending on 6 August 2007 51 Presidency 2003 2005 editSee also Cabinet of Carlos Mesa Without ballot boxes or rifles edit External videosSwearing in of President Carlos Mesa nbsp Carlos Mesa delivers his inaugural address before the National Congress nbsp Discursos Posesion del Pte Carlos D Mesa Gisbert Between 5 25 p m and 10 30 p m the presidency remained effectively vacant 48 At a plenary session of the National Congress an overwhelming majority of ninety seven to thirty legislators with the exception of all but one member of the MNR voted to accept Sanchez de Lozada s resignation 53 54 Vice President Mesa was subsequently sworn in as the 63rd president of Bolivia assuming office through constitutional succession 55 56 Mesa opened his inaugural address with a conciliatory tone emphasizing that Bolivia is not yet a country among equals 57 He outlined his intent to call for a binding referendum on gas exports promised to review the privatization of hydrocarbons and pledged to call for a constituent assembly to revise the Constitution in hopes of addressing ethnic and regional divisions 58 These points became known as the October Agenda and composed the core of Mesa s government program during his presidency 59 His accession to office was largely well received by the country s social sectors who heeded his request for demobilization and an end to the blockades 57 From Cochabamba Evo Morales indicated that the ouster of Sanchez de Lozada was just a small victory but also expressed his willingness to support Mesa s policy initiatives 60 61 Mesa s investiture was met with far more skepticism among the traditional parties His pledge to form a non partisan cabinet devoid of participation from any political party adherents which Mesa phrased as a sacrifice they would have to make was a significant blow to their influence described by one MNR deputy as political suicide 57 The second shock came when Mesa announced his intent to bring his term to a conclusion before 2007 as legally prescribed He called for a transitional government and left Congress responsible for setting a date for new elections 60 In January 2004 amid a high approval rating and broad popular support Mesa retracted this promise and announced his intent to complete Sanchez de Lozada s term 62 Entering the Palacio Quemado Mesa was met with an executive headquarters entirely devoid of personnel save for the presence of his family and some friends who came to visit There he spoke with Bishop Jesus Juarez who suggested to him that to guarantee the country s pacification he had to be in El Alto the next day 63 Mesa heeded the advice traveling in his first full day as president to the former epicenter of the social conflicts to participate in a ceremony in tribute to the victims of the previous government s violent occupation of the city Before a crowd of some 8 000 people he declared that his government would grant compensation of Bs50 000 to the relatives of the deceased and most importantly announced an inquiry into those culpable for the previous week s repressions 64 With the slogan neither forget nor revenge justice Mesa promised that he would ask Congress to begin a responsible investigation that would establish the responsibility of Sanchez de Lozada and members of his government for the numerous deaths caused during the October crisis 65 Almost a year later on 14 October 2004 the National Congress by a vote of 126 to thirteen authorized a trial of responsibilities against Sanchez de Lozada and his entire cabinet under the purview of the Law of Responsibilities Law N 2445 precisely promulgated by the ex president Mesa applauded its passage as a historic decision that strengthens democracy and renews civic faith in its institutions 66 67 Domestic policy edit Economy edit nbsp Mesa attends the funeral of Pope John Paul II 8 April 2005 Among the most pressing challenges facing the early Mesa government was the ongoing economic recession at the start of 2003 the fiscal deficit lay at 8 7 percent of GDP 68 On 1 February 2004 Mesa laid out his economic program aimed at reducing government waste through fiscal austerity and the imposition of new taxes on the nation s highest earners Within the public service sector he implemented a ten percent reduction in his own salary as president and a five percent cut in the wages of all high officials as well as eliminated the bonuses of up to US 4 000 granted to ministers vice ministers and legislators through which their wages had nearly doubled On that point Mesa introduced measures that prohibited government officials from having wages higher than the president s In the private sector he imposed a tax on bank transactions and 1 5 percent of the net worth of those making more than US 50 000 69 70 At the conclusion of Mesa s first full year in office the fiscal deficit had been reduced to 5 5 percent and was at 2 4 percent by the end of 2005 71 72 Judiciary edit Since 1999 the Supreme Court of Justice had been operating at a reduced capacity Congress had left several vacancies due to its inability to nominate judges who could gain the support of two thirds of the legislators causing delays in the judicial system because the Court could not reach the majorities necessary to adopt rulings In light of the parliamentary recess on 31 July 2004 through Supreme Decree N 27650 Mesa swore in six new acting Supreme Court magistrates two judicial counselors and nine district prosecutors 73 Mesa justified that in this way he had guarantee d the independence of the judicial power starkly controlled by the parties The recess appointments were challenged by Congress which filed a motion with the Constitutional Court on the grounds that Mesa had violated the separation of powers On 11 November the Court ruled against Mesa and annulled the appointments 74 75 Constitutional reform edit The primary barrier to Mesa s October Agenda particularly regarding the promise of a referendum and a constituent assembly was that the Political Constitution of the State did not prescribe any mechanisms to carry out either venture For this reason the first step toward the president s program was to amend said Constitution To do this Law N 2410 On The Necessity of Reform to the Constitution promulgated in 2002 by then president Jorge Quiroga was unarchived in order to provide a legal framework for the new alterations 76 77 On 20 February 2004 Congress sanctioned and Mesa promulgated Law N 2631 amending the Constitution to allow for a constituent assembly and the ability to call for either a citizen legislative initiative or a referendum In addition to the main points the opportunity was also taken to abolish parliamentary immunity and allow for dual citizenship 78 79 Hydrocarbons and gas edit 2004 gas referendum edit Results of the 2004 gas referendum18 July 2004 2004 07 18 ResultsRepeal Law N 1689 86 6 Recover wellhead ownership 92 2 Reestablish YPFB 87 3 Export gas as Pacific strategy 54 8 Export gas as national policy 61 7 Source Nohlen 80 Main article 2004 Bolivian gas referendum A few months after the formalization of the new legal structure on 13 April 2004 Mesa issued the call for a referendum on gas opting to do so through supreme decree given a National Congress whose majority opposed his agenda 81 82 The latter decision was the basis for the traditional parties objection to the plebiscite the MIR ADN and sectors of the MNR among other criticisms voiced their opinion that the convocation of the referendum through any form other than a law passed by the legislature was illegal Legislators of Solidarity Civic Unity UCS filed two lawsuits with the Constitutional Court alleging the unconstitutionality of the referendum Days before the vote the Court ruled in favor of Mesa and the National Electoral Court 83 Simultaneously the five questions drafted by both Mesa and MAS representatives e caused a divide in the labor and social movements because they did not directly address the nationalization of gas reserves an action supported by over eighty percent of the country The country s largest workers unions the Bolivian Workers Center COB the Regional Workers Center of El Alto COR El Alto the Unified Syndical Confederation of Rural Workers CSUTCB and the Gas Coordinator among others all voiced their discontent with this crucial omission and called for a boycott of the vote promoting roadblocks and demonstrations to block access to polling sites 84 85 86 On the other hand the Bartolina Sisa Confederation as well as peasant unions in Potosi Oruro and Cochabamba backed the vote in support of Morales 87 For his part Morales encouraged a yes vote on the first three questions and a no on the last two which concerned issues surrounding exports Mesa s campaign denounced the boycott and ramped up security at polling centers to defend against threats of violence while the Electoral Court imposed a fine of Bs150 US 19 for those who did not vote 88 The outcome of the 18 July vote yielded largely positive results for the Mesa administration Labor protests failed to significantly reduce turnout which came in at 60 06 percent a figure that while the lowest of any election since the transition to democracy in 1982 was still substantial The Electoral Court argued that as a referendum participation levels were not comparable to previously held general or municipal elections Most importantly all five questions passed by broad margins Questions one through three regarding the repeal of Sanchez de Lozada s hydrocarbons law State recovery of hydrocarbon ownership at the wellhead and the reestablishment of YPFB all passed with over eighty percent of the vote question two achieved over ninety percent Meanwhile coinciding with the position of the MAS questions four and five on exports saw the least support though they still received over fifty percent and sixty percent of the vote respectively 89 Mesa hailed the results as a significant victory and a vote of confidence in his administration later calling it the brightest moment of our government 81 90 91 2005 Hydrocarbons Law edit Immediately following the referendum Mesa began negotiating with Congress whose participation was necessary to formulate and eventually sanction a law on hydrocarbons His first step was to introduce the Law of Execution and Compliance of the Referendum dubbed the short law to establish a clear interpretation of the vote s results and commit to comply with them Mesa was adamant that the short law must be physically separate from any eventual hydrocarbons legislation Regardless the measure was roundly rejected by the legislature which insisted on a singular hydrocarbons bill As a result Mesa announced on 20 August that he would not enact any legislation authorized by Congress until an agreement was reached a pledge he was forced to retract two days later amid criticism that he was jeopardizing the convocation of municipal elections 92 After a few weeks of negotiations the president relented and agreed to present a solitary large law to Congress for consideration 93 Ultimately without a party base of his own Mesa was incapable of overcoming Congress s ability to block his policy initiatives In late October peasant and mining sectors led by Morales and the COB conducted mass demonstrations in La Paz blockading the streets in and around Congress On 20 October faced with immense external pressure from over 15 000 peasant protesters arriving from Caracollo Congress discarded the president s bill and agreed to move forward with the one proposed by the Mixed Commission for Economic Development headed by Santos Ramirez of the MAS 94 With victory at hand Morales agreed to demobilize his followers 95 After the demise of Mesa s project negotiations moved forward over the more radical proposal The primary point of contention between parliamentarians of different parties surrounded question two of the referendum and what exactly recover y of ownership over all hydrocarbons meant While more radical sectors called for complete nationalization of the industry the MAS took a more moderate stance demanding that oil companies be subject to a royalty of fifty percent of their profits The compromise of the traditional parties was to approve a draft on 3 March 2005 that kept the preexisting eighteen percent royalty in place but added a thirty two percent profits tax that cumulatively would reach fifty percent 96 In response MAS sectors mobilized their bases in Cochabamba and Chuquisaca initiating blockades and roadblocks actions that shattered the tacit alliance Morales had shared with Mesa up to that point 97 nbsp Carlos Mesa resigns source source Segment of the resignation speech of President Carlos Mesa delivered 6 March 2005 98 Problems playing this file See media help The dramatic upturn in the social climate placed Mesa in a precarious political position one that urgently necessitated a skillful maneuver in order to circumvent a repeat of the government repressions of October 2003 which Mesa refused to allow The scheme ultimately devised was two fold the presentation of the president s revocable resignation to Congress and a simultaneous televised address to the nation 97 In a forty five minute speech broadcast on radio and television Mesa put to use his oratory skills denouncing both left wing labor sectors as well as conservative autonomists and business elites and directly calling out Evo Morales by name In addition he reiterated his statement that I am not willing to kill and promised that there will be no deaths on my back before announcing to the nation his intent to resign from the presidency on the grounds that it was impossible to govern under the threat of blockades 99 The gamble succeeded in inverting middle class sentiment in his favor and against his opponents Soon after the speech a mass demonstration reaching approximately 5 000 people assembled outside the Plaza Murillo to support of the continuity of Mesa s mandate Similar gatherings took place in other cities 100 101 With popular support and political momentum at his back Mesa immediately set about exerting pressure on Congress Within hours at a plenary session of legislators convened to formulate a response to Mesa s resignation Minister of the Presidency Jose Galindo laid out the president s terms for remaining in office After three days of negotiations Congress unanimously voted to reject Mesa s resignation on 8 March In exchange the legislature committed to a four point agenda expedite the drafting of the hydrocarbons bill begin the process of approving an autonomy referendum the democratic election of prefects and the convocation of a constituent assembly construct a national social pact and initiate efforts to end the ongoing blockades The agreement was formalized between Mesa and six of the eight congressional parties the traditional right wing parties embattled and under pressure accepted while the MAS and the Pachakuti Indigenous Movement MIP a related left wing party refused to sign and from that point were marginalized entirely solidifying the split between Mesa and Morales for the rest of his administration 102 103 nbsp Mesa s complex relationship with Evo Morales has been one of both cooperation and open hostility 104 Mesa s brief alliance with the conservative sectors of Congress proved tenuous Recalling the accord Mesa regretted that I wasted the chance I accepted a bad agreement with Congress a generic document of moral commitments that were never fulfilled He further outlined that a better course of action would have been to impose his own hydrocarbons bill as a condition for withdrawing his resignation 105 On 15 March the Chamber of Deputies approved the Hydrocarbons Law maintaining the eighteen percent royalty and thirty two percent tax Despite not meeting the opposition s demands Morales relented and called off the ongoing strikes Mesa however maintained that the country did not have the economic capacity to carry out the law and argued that the new tax should be implemented gradually starting at twelve percent and increasing to thirty two percent within a decade 106 Nonetheless on 6 May Congress moved forward and passed the controversial bill Despite having drafted it themselves the failure to agree on the fifty percent royalty led the MAS to near unanimously vote against it 107 Faced with two unappealing choices of either promulgating the law or vetoing it Mesa took a third option neither As stipulated by Article 78 of the Constitution Laws not vetoed or not promulgated by the president of the republic within ten days from their receipt will be promulgated by the president of the congress On 16 May President of the Senate Hormando Vaca Diez signed the bill into law and criticized Mesa for bringing the country to a point of crisis and uncertainty 108 109 Autonomies edit One of the major challenges to the Mesa government was the increasing calls for decentralization from business and civic sectors in the Santa Cruz Department For years the national government had systemically blocked the issue of departmental autonomy and the democratic election of prefects The Banzer and Quiroga administrations sidestepped it entirely while Sanchez de Lozada was actively hostile to the prospect viewing it as the basis for the collapse of the unitary state 110 Mesa took a different stance on the issue announcing on 20 April 2004 his support for regional autonomy He outlined his government s intent to address the matter through the convocation of a constituent assembly that would amend the relevant articles in the Constitution in order to provide for the decentralization of the country and the election of prefects and departmental councilors by popular vote In tandem he issued two decrees that month one served to strengthen departmental councils while the other determined the administrative decentralization of regional health and education services 111 112 113 The response from Santa Cruz civic leaders however was unsupportive of Mesa s proposal On 22 June under the leadership of Ruben Costas head of the Pro Santa Cruz Committee a civic council was convened that approved an eleven point document known as the June Agenda against blockades centralism and violence It demanded a national referendum on autonomies and began collecting signatures for a departmental plebiscite to be held prior to the convocation of the constituent assembly 114 This context precipitated an antagonistic relationship between the Mesa administration and Santa Cruz civic leaders and business elites for the duration of his mandate Although Mesa s policy proposals remained in favor of a move toward autonomy his approval rating in the department fell from sixty one percent in June to thirty six percent by the end of 2004 115 The culmination of this animosity came on 30 December when the government announced the termination of its fuel subsidy in order to reduce the rate of smuggling The result was a twenty three percent increase in the price of diesel and a ten percent gasoline hike 116 The unpopular measure dubbed the dieselazo generated nationwide protests from both left wing indigenous and labor groups and right wing business sectors 117 Most seriously autonomist groups in Santa Cruz joined later by civic groups in Tarija quickly coopted the demonstrations in those departments adding the call for autonomy to their list of demands even after the government agreed to reduce the diesel increase to fifteen percent 118 119 On 21 January the Armed Forces signaled to the president their willingness to intervene in the event that Santa Cruz moved to declare itself autonomous in violation of the Constitution Faced with the possibility of an armed confrontation similar to that of October 2003 Mesa on 26 January resolved with his cabinet to allow the Crucenos to move forward with self rule unimpeded The following day with news that the Santa Cruz Youth Union had decided to seize all public institutions in Santa Cruz de la Sierra Mesa gave the order to withdraw all civil and police personnel from public buildings including the prefecture in order to avoid armed conflict 120 On 28 January Santa Cruz was proclaimed an autonomous department at a cabildo held at the foot of the Christ the Redeemer Monument The declaration came with the formation of a provisional assembly that would negotiate with the government for a departmental autonomy referendum in order to legitimize the new authority which at the moment contravened the Constitution 121 122 That same day Mesa issued Supreme Decree N 27988 which called for the election of prefects in all nine departments Since the Constitution granted the power to designate prefects solely to the president the decree worked around that by constraining the head of state only to appoint those who obtained a majority of the popular vote 123 124 The decree was formalized by a complementary law passed by Congress on 8 April 125 On 11 February Mesa delegated to Congress the task of setting a date for the autonomies referendum 126 Foreign policy edit External videosSigning of the gas export contract to Argentina nbsp Mesa meets with Argentine President Nestor Kirchner 22 July 2004 nbsp Discursos Firma del contrato de venta de gas a la Argentina Argentina edit See also Argentina Bolivia relations On 15 April 2004 Mesa authorized an agreement with Argentine President Nestor Kirchner allowing for the sale of four million cubic meters daily of Bolivian gas for a six month period with the possibility of renewal depending on the outcome of the July referendum 127 The arrangement was supported by civic groups in Tarija home to eighty five percent of the country s natural gas but was met with suspicion by certain labor sectors who viewed it as a possible roundabout way for Bolivian gas to be exported to Chile through Argentina 128 In view of this the Mesa administration conditioned the sale on the promise that not one molecule of Bolivian gas could be exported to Chile Doing so would constitute a contract violation on the part of Argentina 129 Mesa met with Kirchner twice more during his presidency this time in Bolivia once for a short discussion in July and another in October 2004 130 In the latter the two presidents signed an agreement that increased Bolivian gas export volumes from 6 5 million to 26 5 million cubic meters per day to help mitigate the Argentine energy crisis 131 External videosMonterrey Special Summit of the Americas nbsp Mesa with U S President George W Bush in Monterrey Mexico 13 January 2004 nbsp Discursos Cumbre Extraordinaria de las Americas Chile and the Maritime Demand edit Further information Atacama border dispute See also Bolivia Chile relations As with near universally all previous governments the relationship between Bolivia and Chile during the Mesa administration centered fundamentally on Bolivia s claim of sovereign access to the Pacific Ocean a dispute which by 2004 had reached its centennial without compromise Just under a month into Mesa s presidency the first discussions surrounding the maritime issue took place On 14 November 2003 during the ongoing Ibero American Summit Mesa met privately with Chilean President Ricardo Lagos at the Los Tajibos Hotel in Santa Cruz de la Sierra The dialogue between the two heads of state concluded with an agreement in principle on a sovereign corridor connecting Bolivia to the Pacific through a 10 km 6 21 mi strip of land along the Chile Peru border As per the Treaty of Ancon any cession of land formerly belonging to Peru necessitates Peruvian approval and therefore Lagos stipulated that if there is a Peruvian yes there will be a Chilean yes 132 Mesa raised the maritime claim again at the Monterrey Special Summit of the Americas in January 2004 There he emphasized the good relationship between the two countries but expressed his view that such relations required the resolution of issues that for a reason of justice must be resolved 133 Mesa s statements opened a rift between himself and Lagos who expressed his regret for what happened in Monterrey because these are spaces to advance on collective and multilateral issues 134 Nonetheless Mesa was received with praise by the National Congress which declared its strongest and most determined support for the president Later that month at a seven hour session of parliament Congress declared the maritime claim to be an inalienable right of the Bolivian people and issued its approval for Mesa s strategy of multilateralizing the demand in order to gain support from as many nations as possible 135 136 At the 34th General Assembly of the Organization of American States held in Quito Ecuador the Bolivian delegation distributed its Libro Azul which recounted the government s interpretation of events surrounding the War of the Pacific and justifies the country s historical claim The 35th OAS General Assembly was held in Fort Lauderdale from 5 to 7 June 2005 Mesa issued his definitive resignation on 6 June It was the last time the outgoing government addressed the maritime claim bringing an end to Mesa s strategy against Chile 137 Peru edit See also Bolivia Peru relations nbsp Presidents of Bolivia Brazil and Peru inaugurate a bridge connecting Brazil and Peru 11 August 2004 At a meeting in Lima held on 4 November 2003 Mesa and Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo agreed on the framework for a common market between the two states in order to support greater cultural commercial and economic integration as advocated by the Andean Community 138 Days after voters approved gas exportation as part of national policy in the gas referendum the Bolivian government scheduled talks with their counterparts in Peru to discuss the topic 139 On 4 August 2004 Mesa and Toledo signed a letter of intent promising to analyze the joint exportation of natural gas The deal granted Bolivia a special economic zone centered on the southern port of Ilo from where it could export its gas to lucrative markets in Mexico and the United States The agreement allowed Bolivia access to the Pacific for the first time in over a century 140 Days later the two presidents along with Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva inaugurated two bridges connecting Bolivia and Peru to Brazil Through this Toledo expressed his hope that a tripartite market between the three countries could pave the way for broader continental integration 141 Definitive resignation edit Despite enjoying an approval rating of over sixty percent Mesa s inability to find a compromise with the National Congress especially after his break in relations with the MAS led him to call for an early end to his term On 15 March 2005 less than a week after Congress rejected his resignation Mesa announced his intent to introduce a bill that would advance the call for general elections to 28 August cutting short his term by two years 142 Two days later Congress rejected his proposal under the justification that it lack ed a legal basis 143 After returning the unenacted hydrocarbons bill to Congress Mesa attempted to salvage his domestic policy agenda by calling a National Meeting for Unity to be held in Sucre on 16 May The conference would have sought to find consensus on the hydrocarbons law and establish concrete dates for the convocation of an autonomies referendum and elections for a constituent assembly and prefects Ninety seven sectors were invited including the three branches of government ex presidents heads of political parties mayors of the nine departmental capitols and El Alto the association of municipalities the presidents of the nine departmental civic committees four representatives of indigenous organizations two from trade unions and two from large businesses 144 145 While the Catholic Church the Human Rights Assembly and some civic groups agreed to participate most political parties rejected the meeting including both the MNR and MAS Mesa was ultimately forced to suspend the event after Congress declined to attend 146 147 By this point the country faced increasingly debilitating strikes and demonstrations from opposing groups seeking conflicting goals The MAS demanded the urgent convocation of a constituent assembly to rewrite the Constitution They were supported by trade unions which additionally called for the immediate nationalization of gas In the eastern departments protests were held calling for a referendum on autonomies The unrest was exacerbated by the indecision of Congress which remained deadlocked over whether to convene the constituent assembly and later hold the autonomies referendum or hold both constituent elections and the referendum simultaneously Finally on 2 June Mesa opted to circumvent the legislature and by supreme decree scheduled the referendum and elections for the constituent assembly for 16 October 148 149 Mesa s actions failed to quell the unrest and were rejected by both left wing and right wing sectors of the country Faced with the tense political situation and unwilling to allow military action against protesters Mesa tendered his resignation on 6 June With that the responsibility fell to Congress to accept it and swear in a new individual to the presidency The candidate next in line to succeed Mesa was Hormando Vaca Diez the president of the Senate followed by Mario Cossio of the Chamber of Deputies 150 Viewing that the country would not accept such a succession by members of the traditional political parties Mesa called on Vaca Diez and Cossio to renounce their succession rights to avoid an explosion in the country This request was not considered by Vaca Diez who announced his intention to convene a session of Congress in Sucre La Paz was almost entirely blockaded to accept Mesa s resignation and install himself as president 151 After three days of resistance Vaca Diez conceded to popular pressure and along with Cossio the two legislative heads renounced their right to succession 152 At 11 45 p m on 9 June 2005 Eduardo Rodriguez Veltze the president of the Supreme Court of Justice was sworn in as the 64th president of Bolivia at an extraordinary session of Congress held in Sucre 153 The following day Mesa received Rodriguez Veltze in La Paz For Mesa that moment had an immense symbolic load I had entered through the front door and was leaving through the front door with my forehead high and looking the country in the eye 154 Post presidency 2005 2018 edit nbsp Mesa at a panel of the Global Rule of Law Exchange in Sao Paulo 2016 After his departure from the Palacio Quemado Mesa retired from politics and returned to his work as a journalist In 2008 he published Presidencia Sitiada a memoir of his time as head of state The following year together with Mario Espinoza he directed wrote and narrated Bolivia Siglo XX a documentary series covering the most important events in twentieth century Bolivian history 104 On 7 December 2012 the Association of Journalists of La Paz awarded Mesa the National Journalism Award for his extensive contributions to Bolivian media 155 156 Spokesman for the Maritime Demand edit Further information Obligation to Negotiate Access to the Pacific OceanOn 28 April 2014 now president Evo Morales announced the appointment of Mesa as a member of the team of the Strategic Directorate of the Maritime Claim DIREMAR As outlined by the president Mesa s task would be to represent Bolivia s maritime claim in all international forums presenting the legal and historical bases of the country s claim against Chile for which it had filed a lawsuit with the International Court of Justice 157 158 The decision to appoint Mesa did not come as a surprise several politicians in past weeks including President of the Chamber of Deputies Marcelo Elio Chavez had suggested his inclusion on the DIREMAR team due to his historical expertise Speculation had even arisen that he might be appointed ambassador to Peru an extreme Morales was not entirely comfortable with and which he circumvented by specifying that Mesa s new post would not constitute an official diplomatic office because it is not necessary for him to have this position since as a former president and former vice president he has all the authority to assume this responsibility 159 This fact was reiterated by Mesa who stated that he had agreed with the president that I am not a public official I will not be appointed nor will there be a swearing in ceremony He further noted that he would hold his position ad honorem and would not receive a salary for his work 160 However as noted by economist Alberto Bonadona following his appointment the government began paying Mesa the life annuity that corresponded to him as a former president which it had previously blocked from being delivered With all certainty they paid him retroactively Bonadona stated 161 nbsp Cover of The Book of the Sea coordinated by Mesa Mesa began his task with an eye towards the 50th G77 China Summit hosted by Bolivia in Santa Cruz de la Sierra between 14 and 15 June of that year While Mesa stated that Bolivia would not seek an official statement of solidarity from the member states present he highlighted the gathering as an opportunity to disseminate the country s maritime claim and stated that the meeting should have the issue of the sea as a fundamental aspect 162 163 On 16 June Mesa and Morales jointly presented El Libro del Mar at a ceremony in the Palacio Quemado The book distributed to the attendees of the G77 in the previous days described the essential arguments that Bolivia intended to present to the international community 164 165 External videosInterview in Santiago Chile nbsp Juan Manuel Astorga interviews Mesa for the program El Informante nbsp Entrevista en Santiago de Chile During this time a notable dichotomy between Mesa s international and domestic relationship with Morales developed On the one hand he supported and closely cooperated with the president on matters relating to the maritime lawsuit At the same time he remained harshly critical of the government s undemocratic tendencies and the ruling party filed various legal complaints against him the most notable being the Quiborax case in which he was accused of breach of duties for actions taken during his presidency 166 104 Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera described Mesa as an excellent explainer of the maritime cause but stated that as a politician internally he is a resounding failure 167 Nonetheless in 2019 Mesa affirmed that if asked to return as spokesman for the maritime cause he would do it again one two five 100 200 times more 168 In late September 2018 Mesa traveled to The Hague to hear the ICJ s final ruling 169 In an interview for the Chilean newspaper La Tercera Mesa assured that the Bolivian people are prepared to receive the ruling regardless of its content and urged both countries to abide by the court s decision 170 On 1 October 2018 by a vote of twelve to three the ICJ ruled that Chile was not obligated to negotiate sovereign access to the Pacific with Bolivia 171 Shortly after Mesa called on Bolivians to accept the ruling even though it seems unfair He urged the government to respect the decision and asked that it move forward with a new policy towards Chile with the understanding that it is not obliged to negotiate 172 Return to politics 2018 present editIn mid 2018 Mesa appeared as a lead contender against Morales in early voting intention polls On 29 July 2018 the company Mercados y Samples released a poll for Pagina Siete that showed Mesa with a first round favorability of twenty five percent two points behind Morales twenty seven percent Such a result would launch a runoff in which polling gave Mesa an over ten point victory of forty eight percent over Morales thirty two percent MAS Senator Ciro Zabala credited this polling victory to the opposition making Mesa seem victimized by the Quiborax case This point was reiterated by Deputy Edgar Montano who admitted that the controversy makes Mesa grow On the other hand opposition leaders affirmed that Mesa s popularity was due to what they claimed to be political persecution by the government against him 173 External videosFor a Government of Citizens nbsp Carlos Mesa announces his candidacy for the presidency nbsp Carlos Mesa anuncia su candidatura a la presidencia del Estado Por un Gobierno de Ciudadanos In an interview with Erbol on 19 September Mesa declared that he would not make any political statements or comment on his potential candidacy as long as the issue of the sea is the fundamental question committing himself entirely to his duties until the ruling by The Hague on 1 October 174 On 5 October the Revolutionary Left Front FRI formally invited Mesa to be the party s presidential candidate in the 2019 elections While Mesa claimed that he would make a decision in the next few hours both Walter Villagra secretary general of the FRI and Mesa s lawyer Carlos Alarcon confirmed that he had already accepted 175 The following day Mesa formally launched his 2019 presidential candidacy In a video message titled For a Government of Citizens Mesa stated that I have made the decision to be a candidate for the presidency of the State And I do so for a very clear reason because this is a time of historical inflection because we are at the beginning on the threshold of a new time 176 He further outlined his intention to form a citizen movement which would break the exhausted cycle of over a decade of MAS rule 177 Mesa s announcement was hailed by various opposition groups including leaders both the National Unity Front UN and the Social Democratic Movement MDS who signaled their hopes of sealing an alliance with the FRI 178 Leader of Civic Community edit Further information Civic Community On 24 October La Paz Mayor Luis Revilla announced that his Sovereignty and Liberty SOL bo civic group had decided to support Mesa s candidacy 179 After a 26 minute tour through the Central Urban Park of La Paz on 30 October Mesa and Revilla announced to the media that they had agreed to form a coalition between the two parties 180 The agreement was formalized the following day 181 and registered with the Supreme Electoral Tribunal TSE on 13 November 2018 under the name Civic Community CC The alliance initially included the FRI SOL bo and over 50 citizens platforms 182 However CC failed to gather a fully unified opposition pact as UN and MDS formalized their own alliance while other parties registered individually 183 Jhonny Fernandez leader of UCS explained that sealing a deal was difficult because the FRI was not interested in working with leaders who were in political and administrative positions in previous governments 184 2019 presidential election edit Main article 2019 Bolivian general election See also Civic Community 2019 general election nbsp Annulled 2019 departmental election results One of the agreements made by Revilla and Mesa was that the latter would be free to nominate his running mate 185 On 27 November Mesa announced that Gustavo Pedraza his former minister of sustainable development would accompany him as his vice presidential candidate 186 Civic Community opened its electoral campaign in Tarija with a door to door canvassing drive and the announcement of a national tour through the country 187 188 One of Mesa s main campaign tactics was to denounce Morales bid for a fourth term as illegal due to the fact that voters rejected abolishing term limits in 2016 189 In that vein he promoted the strengthening of democratic institutions and additionally ran on environmental protection and addressing corruption 190 Crisis Mesa calls fraud edit Main article 2019 Bolivian protests Further information 2019 Bolivian political crisis General elections were held on 20 October By the following day with a provisional count of eighty three percent of ballots Morales and Mesa appeared poised for a second round in December Mesa hailed his movement s unquestionable triumph f and swiftly took steps to gather the endorsements of the other opposition parties for the definitive triumph in the runoff 193 Shortly after however he expressed concern that the government s official live count had paralyzed at 27 14 percent and called for civic mobilizations and opposition demonstrations before the TSE and its departmental branches to avoid suspected fraud 194 After a full day without live results the TSE released its updated count which placed Morales at 46 86 percent and Mesa at 36 72 percent with ninety five percent of votes tallied Such an outcome gave the president an over ten point lead by a margin of just 0 1 percent sufficient to circumvent a runoff g Mesa denounced the unexpected result as distorted and rigged and alleged a gigantic fraud underway As a result he called for his supporters to permanently mobilize until a second round was agreed to 196 197 On 3 November in the midst of an increasingly unsustainable political situation Mesa insisted on the resignation of the members of the TSE and the convocation of fresh general elections under the supervision of new electoral authorities rejecting a second round as untenable while at the same time implicitly refusing to support the more radical demands from Santa Cruz civic leaders like Luis Fernando Camacho that Morales resign 198 By 10 November however Mesa had joined the call for Morales to step aside if he has an iota of patriotism left 199 The day before that he rejected Morales call for dialogue with the opposition stating I have nothing to negotiate 200 After twenty days of continuous demonstrations and with his grip on the country slipping Morales together with his vice president announced his abdication on 10 November 201 After a series of ensuing resignations that exhausted the presidential line of succession followed by two days of uncertainty opposition senator Jeanine Anez was proclaimed first president of the Senate and through that president of the State Two days later Mesa gave his support to the transitional government but assured that his alliance would not participate in it in order to focus its attention on soon to be called elections 202 On 8 June 2021 Anez testified before the Prosecutor s Office that Mesa had blocked the assumption of a MAS legislator to the presidency during the 2019 crisis During extra legislative meetings held to discuss a solution to the serious issues facing the country then president of the Senate Adriana Salvatierra anticipating the possible resignation of Morales raised her claim to constitutional succession and asked if the opposition would accept it According to Anez Mr Antonio Quiroga calls Mr Carlos Mesa by phone to consult him and he replies that the public would not accept that succession because the protests would continue Salvatierra announced her resignation an hour after Morales issued his 203 204 Mesa did not comment on Anez s testimony but in October affirmed that at meetings sponsored by the Catholic Church and European Union Salvatierra never raised her right to take office He also called back to January 2020 when she reported to Los Tiempos that her resignation had been part of a political agreement made with Morales 205 nbsp 2020 departmental election results 2020 presidential election edit Main article 2020 Bolivian general election See also Civic Community 2020 general election A month after the establishment of the transitional government Mesa confirmed that he would stand as a candidate in the rerun general elections 206 Despite initial hopes of leading a unified front against the MAS Mesa s campaign quickly came up against multiple presidential hopefuls including the candidacy of President Anez herself which he considered a great mistake 207 On 3 February a total of seven opposition fronts were registered for the new elections including Mesa s Civic Community as well as Anez s Juntos alliance Luis Fernando Camacho s Creemos and Libre21 of Jorge Quiroga among other minor parties 208 The fracturing of the opposition risked the dispersion of the vote and though the various parties consolidated with the withdrawal of Anez and Quiroga in the final weeks and days of the election cycle Mesa s campaign was hampered nonetheless 209 210 In the elections of 18 October these factors contributed to the victory of the MAS and its candidate Luis Arce in the first round Mesa came in second with 28 83 percent having lost a significant percentage of the vote to Camacho who came in third with fourteen percent 211 Mesa conceded defeat the day after the election and noted his coalition s position as the head of the opposition in the Legislative Assembly 212 Analysts have attributed Mesa s electoral defeat to the passive nature of his campaign Due to the COVID 19 pandemic Mesa s campaign remained largely virtual and failed to reach out to social sectors At the same time external factors such as the unpopularity of the interim government and the candidacy of Camacho which siphoned support from Santa Cruz contributed to Mesa s loss 213 Ideology and personality editPolitical positions edit Texas A amp M political analyst Diego von Vacano stated that since his reentry into politics Mesa has moved to the left largely due to the fact that Morales shifted the entire spectrum of Bolivian politics to the left In 2020 Mesa was the only presidential candidate who expressed a willingness to open a national discussion on issues such as gay marriage abortion and marijuana legalization 214 Michael Shifter president of the Inter American Dialogue of which Mesa is a member describes Mesa as a centrist committed to democratic values who understands the importance of reconciliation as a condition for moving forward 215 Personally Mesa states that in previous years he would have considered himself a social democrat but that he no longer subscribes to any singular ideological viewpoint At the same time he asserts that he is not at all from the right and of the 70s Marxist leftism less so 189 In an interview with El Pais of Tarija Mesa affirmed that I don t think it matters if I m from the left center or right 216 Mesa credits his schooling at a Jesuit institution as having always been very strong in my vision of the spiritual but states that he has been skeptical about religious issues for several years the more I have delved into the subject more deeply 217 In late 2018 he proposed the enactment of a law that would guarantee the separation of church and state as prescribed by the 2009 Constitution 218 In international relations Mesa has opened up the possibility of good relations with any nation regardless of political ideology so long as they are in the best benefit for Bolivia and within the framework of respect for democracy and human rights He has advocated for the resumption of bilateral relations with the United States and the expansion of economic agreements with China and Russia 219 220 When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 Mesa decried the act as imperialist and called on the government to release an official condemnation 221 Mesa has advocated for judicial reform within the country and blamed the MAS for perverting justice to the point that it has become a danger to human rights In particular he pointed to the multitude of political prisoners held by the government and the harsh prosecution of infractions committed by opposition politicians compared to those of the ruling party 222 After the Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts for Bolivia concluded a lack of judicial independence Mesa proposed a ninety day judicial reform plan entailing amendments to the Constitution and the organic law of the Prosecutor s Office and modifications to the system of electing magistrates and appointing national and departmental prosecutors 223 In February 2022 CC proposed a judicial reform bill that would amend nine articles of the Constitution to guarantee judicial independence 224 On environmental issues Mesa pledged to better guarantee the protection of the country s rainforests against external issues such as the fires that affected it in 2019 He also opposes the expansion of agricultural land into protected areas but has promised to seek solutions that harmonize progress and development with environmental protection 225 In 2019 and 2020 the non profit organization Sachamama in partnership with leading environmental groups like the WWF placed Mesa on its list of The 100 Latinos Most Committed to Climate Action 226 227 Together with Juan Carlos Enriquez Ramiro Molina Barrios and Marcos Loayza he produced Planeta Bolivia a series of five documentaries covering crucial environmental challenges facing the country in the twenty first century In 2017 it was screened at the 13th Inkafest Peru s mountain film festival in Arequipa 228 Personality edit Jose Lizaure official photographer of the presidency describes Mesa as methodical and recounts that as president he would break protocols and leave the Palacio Quemado to greet people on the street 229 Upon his assumption to the presidency in 2003 Lupe Cajias described Mesa as someone who is humble and accepts his mistakes and tries to rectify them but also noted that he was naive and too sincere He puts his cards on the table when in politics you have to know how to be calculating 230 This sentiment was echoed by Jose Antonio Quiroga one of Mesa s close friends and collaborators who stated that he was a politician without a party granting him enormous autonomy but limiting his proposals to his personal ability As noted by La Publica Mesa s quality as an intellectual and academic makes him able to talk about everything however he tends to surround himself with a very small team of personal collaborators For this reason many in the press have described him as distant or arrogant During his 2019 and 2020 presidential bids Mesa was noted as one of the few politicians who had adapted to the use of social media for campaigning frequently broadcasting live on Facebook and Twitter to address his supporters and respond to questions 161 Electoral history editYear Office Party Alliance First round Second round Result Ref Votes P Votes P 2002 Vice president Independent MNR MBL 624 126 22 5 1st 84 54 19 1st h Won 231 2019 President Revolutionary Left Front Civic Community 2 240 920 36 51 2nd Eliminated Annulled 232 2020 Revolutionary Left Front Civic Community 1 775 943 28 83 2nd Eliminated Lost 233 Source Plurinational Electoral Organ Electoral AtlasDistinctions editMain article List of awards and honors received by Carlos Mesa National edit External videosRecipients of the Order of the Sun nbsp President Alejandro Toledo decorates Mesa and his parents with the Order of the Sun of Peru nbsp Discursos Condecoraciones al Sr Jose Mesa y Teresa Gisbert Award or decoration Country Date nbsp Grand Collar of the Order of the Condor of the Andes nbsp Bolivia 2003 2005 Source Curriculum Vitae Carlos Mesa Foreign edit Award or decoration Country Date nbsp Officer s Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany nbsp Germany 1987 nbsp Officer of the Order of Rio Branco nbsp Brazil 1990 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order pro Merito Melitensi nbsp Malta 2002 nbsp Grand Cross with Diamonds of the Order of the Sun of Peru nbsp Peru 2004 nbsp Grand Collar of the Order of San Carlos nbsp Colombia nbsp Collar of the Order of the Aztec Eagle nbsp Mexico 2005 Source Curriculum Vitae Carlos MesaFilmography editYear Title Credited as Director Executive Producer 1977 I am the Vampire of my Heart Yes No 1988 Great Power Heaven and Hell Yes No 1995 234 Jonah and the Pink Whale No Yes 2009 235 Bolivia XX Century i Yes No 2016 236 Planet Bolivia No Yes Source Curriculum Vitae Carlos MesaPublications editBooks edit Mesa Gisbert Carlos D 1982 El Cine Boliviano Segun Luis Espinal in Spanish La Paz Editorial Don Bosco 1983 Presidentes de Bolivia Entre Urnas y Fusiles in Spanish 1st ed La Paz Editorial Gisbert 1985 La Aventura del Cine Boliviano 1952 1985 in Spanish La Paz Editorial Gisbert 1993 De Cerca Una Decada de Conversaciones en Democracia in Spanish La Paz Banco Boliviano Americano Periodistas Asociados Television and ILDIS 1994 La Epopeya del Futbol Boliviano 1896 1993 in Spanish La Paz Federacion Boliviana de Futbol and Periodistas Asociados Television 1995 Territorios de Libertad in Spanish La Paz Banco BISA and Periodistas Asociados Television 2000 La Espada en la Palabra in Spanish La Paz Editorial Aguilar ISBN 978 99905 2 158 0 2008 Presidencia Sitiada Memorias de mi Gobierno in Spanish 1st 2nd and 3rd ed La Paz Plural Editores and Fundacion Comunidad ISBN 978 99954 1 122 0 2008 Un gobierno de Ciudadanos in Spanish La Paz Plural Editores and Fundacion Comunidad ISBN 978 99954 1 123 7 2012 La Paz Golf Club 100 Anos de Historia in Spanish La Paz Golf Club 2013 La Sirena y el Charango Ensayo sobre el Mestizaje in Spanish 1st and 2nd ed La Paz Editorial Gisbert and Fundacion Comunidad ISBN 978 99954 862 2 8 2014 Breve Historia de las Politicas Publicas en Bolivia in Spanish 1st ed La Paz Editorial Gisbert ISBN 978 99954 862 9 7 2014 Soliloquio del Conquistador in Spanish 1st ed La Paz Editorial Edaf and Universidad de las Americas Puebla ISBN 978 84 414 3416 5 2016 La Historia del Mar Boliviano in Spanish La Paz Editorial Gisbert ISBN 978 99974 878 7 2 2017 Bolivia 1982 2006 Democracia in Spanish 1st and 2nd ed La Paz Editorial Gisbert ISBN 978 99974 917 3 2 Co authored edit Mesa Gisbert Carlos D Palacios Beatriz Sanjines Jorge von Vacano Arturo 1979 Cine Boliviano del Realizador al Critico in Spanish La Paz Editorial Gisbert de Mesa Jose Gisbert Teresa Vasquez Humberto 1983 Manual de Historia de Bolivia in Spanish 2nd ed La Paz Editorial Gisbert OCLC 10711672 Rueda Pena Mario 1991 Un Debate Entre Gitanos in Spanish La Paz Banco Boliviano Americano and Periodistas Asociados Television de Mesa Jose Gisbert Teresa 1997 Historia de Bolivia in Spanish 1st ed La Paz Editorial Gisbert Coordinated edit El Salto al Futuro in Spanish La Paz Federacion Boliviana de Futbol 1995 La Paz 450 Anos in Spanish La Paz Honorable Alcaldia Municipal de La Paz 1998 ISBN 978 99905 47 01 6 Bolivia el Milenio Cochabamba y Santa Cruz in Spanish Editorial Canelas and Editorial El Deber 1999 El Vicepresidente La Sombra del Poder in Spanish La Paz Vicepresidencia de la Republica Presidencia del Congreso 2003 El Libro Azul la Demanda Maritima Boliviana in Spanish La Paz Presidencia de la Republica and Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores 2004 El Libro del Mar PDF in Spanish La Paz Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores 2014 References editNotes edit The Bolivian government did not specify when Mesa s term as spokesman ended In response to a question on the matter issued on 11 October Foreign Minister Diego Pary Rodriguez stated that the ruling in the Court has concluded on the maritime claim implying that Mesa s functions ceased on that date 1 In Spanish orthography the paternal surname is de Mesa 2 The nobiliary particle de is omitted by most publications and by Mesa himself It has been recorded that until 1989 Mesa s positions were in favor of the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement the party of Paz Estenssoro and later Sanchez de Lozada in 66 7 percent of cases During the run of De Cerca Sanchez de Lozada was one of the most frequent guests on the program with fifteen appearances Still Oscar Eid and Jaime Paz Zamora two of Sanchez de Lozada s primary political opponents were also recurring guests with six appearances each As noted by Pagina Siete The data measure Mesa s sympathies but also illustrate his condition as a journalist forced to be plural and invite even those who did not like him to speak 17 Mesa contradicts this stating that on the day of the Convention Sanchez Berzain had specifically brought in Rene Joaquino from Potosi as a backup candidate in the event that he ran at the last minute Joaquino confirmed that he was present on that date but states he was only there to confirm a previous rejection of the offer 24 The MAS participated in the formulation of questions two and three of the referendum 83 The move to a second round was considered especially significant as it was the first time Morales failed to achieve a first round victory with over fifty percent support since being first elected in 2005 191 192 In Bolivia a second round is avoided by one candidate either reaching fifty percent of the vote or achieving a plurality with ten percent more votes than the next closest competitor 195 Second round by parliamentary vote Also a writer and the presenter Footnotes edit Canciller no responde si Carlos Mesa sigue siendo vocero de la demanda maritima Los Tiempos in Spanish 11 October 2018 Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Padron electoral biometrico y militancia Carlos Diego de Mesa Gisbert yoparticipo oep org bo in Spanish La Paz Plurinational Electoral Organ 24 January 2021 Retrieved 23 June 2022 Cardenas Jose Arturo 18 October 2020 Carlos Mesa un reincidente en la politica boliviana que pelea por un balotaje Infobae in Spanish Buenos Aires Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2021 Donaire Gines 9 February 2005 El presidente de Bolivia Hijo Adoptivo de Alcala la Real por sus origenes El Pais in Spanish Madrid ISSN 1134 6582 Archived from the original on 9 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Bouysse Cassagne Therese 1 March 2018 In Memoriam Teresa Gisbert 1926 2018 ifea hypotheses org in French Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2021 Quien fue Teresa Gisbert de Mesa El Deber in Spanish Santa Cruz de la Sierra 19 February 2018 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2021 Fallece Jose Mesa Figueroa notable historiador del pais Opinion in Spanish Cochabamba 23 July 2010 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2021 Mesa Carlos 27 December 2020 50 anos despues los que mas los que mas nos divertimos Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2021 Quien es Carlos Mesa el primer adversario en hacerle sombra a Evo Morales que podria presidir Bolivia El Cronista in Spanish Buenos Aires 21 October 2019 Archived from the original on 28 November 2019 Retrieved 7 December 2021 a b c Curriculum Vitae de CARLOS D MESA GISBERT Ex Presidente de la Republica de Bolivia Biblioteca Virtual Carlos D Mesa in Spanish La Paz 24 November 2017 Archived from the original on 9 June 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2021 Rojas Fernanda 12 October 2019 Carlos Mesa El perfil desconocido del rival de Evo Morales La Tercera in Spanish Santiago Archived from the original on 10 August 2020 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Cazas Anahi 8 July 2016 Cinemateca festeja 40 anos con reconocimientos a Mesa y Susz Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 1993 pp 1 2 Mesa Gisbert 1993 p 3 Mesa Gisbert 1993 pp 3 4 Mesa Gisbert 1993 pp 4 5 a b Archondo Rafael 16 August 2019 La historia de PAT Pagina Siete in Spanish Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 pp 31 32 Forero Juan 26 February 2006 The American Selling of the Bolivian President 2002 The New York Times Bogota ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 32 Mesa Gisbert 2010 pp 33 38 Mesa Gisbert 2010 pp 40 41 Balcazar En algunos casos sabemos quien le entregaba a Mesa y cuanto dinero Urgente bo in Spanish La Paz 2 August 2019 Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2021 Joaquino dice que estuvo en casa de Goni para rechazar una candidatura Erbol Archivo in Spanish 11 July 2014 Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Martinez Emilio 26 July 2019 Canal de Mesa recibio 6 millones de Bs coincidiendo con informacion sobre venta de candidatura eju Santa Cruz de la Sierra Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2021 Mesa sobre acusacion de lavado de dinero De haber sido un hecho irregular ya prescribio Los Tiempos in Spanish Cochabamba 26 September 2019 Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Elecciones generales Goni y Carlos Mesa son los candidatos del MNR Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 3 February 2002 Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2021 Assies amp Salman 2003 pp 1 2 Enver Andrew 2 August 2002 Rivals in Bolivia Forge Alliance Los Angeles Times La Paz Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Faiola Anthony 5 August 2002 Bolivia s Ex President Regains Post The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on 13 January 2022 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Mesa Unidad de Lucha contra la Corrupcion para realizar su trabajo Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 20 August 2002 Archived from the original on 20 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Anticorrupcion Lupe Cajias presentara su primera evaluacion mensual Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 29 September 2002 Archived from the original on 20 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 56 Bolivia Legal Cooperation Department PDF Organization of American States in Spanish Archived PDF from the original on 20 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Cajias dice que apenas le hizo un rasguno a la corrupcion Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 11 August 2003 Archived from the original on 20 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Siles Andres Manuel 6 November 2019 Discurso y corrupcion La Razon in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 20 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Rojas Rios Cesar 2007 Democracia de alta tension conflictividad y cambio social en la Bolivia del siglo XXI in Spanish La Paz Plural Editores p 108 ISBN 978 99954 1 075 9 Retrieved 5 January 2022 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 64 Crespo Luis 10 February 2003 Bolivia impuesto polemico BBC Mundo in Spanish London Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 Retrieved 19 December 2021 Gori Graham 13 February 2003 14 killed in Bolivian riots The Guardian London Associated Press Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert Carlos D 12 February 2013 12 de Febrero de 2003 Diez Anos Despues Mi Testimonio carlosdmesa com in Spanish Archived from the original on 20 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 pp 58 63 U N GAOR 58th Sess 9th plen mtg U N Doc A 58 PV 9 undocs org New York City United Nations 24 September 2003 p 26 Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 15 December 2021 Duran Conde Jhouselinne Sandra 18 June 2019 Octubre Negro y los puros de Carlos Mesa La Epoca in Spanish Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 15 December 2021 Layme Beatriz 13 March 2018 Mesa advirtio a Goni en 2003 Los muertos te van a enterrar Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 15 December 2021 Carlos Mesa advirtio a Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada los muertos te van a enterrar Los Tiempos in Spanish Cochabamba 25 November 2009 Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Vicepresidente retira su apoyo al Presidente de Bolivia Plainview Daily Herald in Spanish 13 October 2003 Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Mesa no volvera no ayudara a la polarizacion y pide dialogo patriotico Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 16 October 2003 Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 a b Atahuichi Ruben 17 October 2021 En 2003 Carlos Mesa juro bajo sucesion constitucional La Razon in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 5 November 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Mesa el periodista presidente BBC Mundo in Spanish London 18 October 2003 Archived from the original on 14 December 2021 Retrieved 14 December 2021 MNR No hubo conspiracion golpista contra Goni pero Mesa fue desleal Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 22 October 2004 Archived from the original on 14 December 2021 Retrieved 14 December 2021 a b c Ortiz Pablo 13 October 2013 Insurreccion de octubre Goni se fue antes de ser colgado y Mesa espero su momento para ser presidente El Deber in Spanish Santa Cruz de la Sierra Archived from the original on 14 December 2021 Retrieved 14 December 2021 via eju Mendieta Romero Gonzalo 25 February 2018 Greenlee Goni estaba contra las cuerdas Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 15 December 2021 Jeter Jon 18 October 2003 Protests Force Bolivian Leader to Resign The Washington Post Archived from the original on 13 January 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2021 Assies amp Salman 2003 p 66 Rohter Larry 18 October 2003 Bolivian Leader Resigns and His Vice President Steps In The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Sin urnas ni fusiles Carlos Mesa asume el reto de unir al pais Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 17 October 2003 Archived from the original on 14 December 2021 Retrieved 14 December 2021 a b c Relea Francesc 18 October 2003 El nuevo presidente de Bolivia formara un Gobierno sin presencia de partidos politicos El Pais in Spanish Madrid ISSN 1134 6582 Archived from the original on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Assies amp Salman 2003 pp 66 67 Arraras amp Deheza 2005 p 162 a b Gray Kevin 17 October 2003 Mesa presidente de Bolivia tras renuncia de Sanchez de Lozada Laredo Morning Times in Spanish Archived from the original on 14 December 2021 Retrieved 14 December 2021 Sanchez de Lozada envio carta de renuncia al Congreso El Universo in Spanish Guayaquil 18 October 2003 Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 From here to 2007 without falling The Economist Cochabamba and La Paz 22 January 2004 ISSN 0013 0613 Archived from the original on 9 January 2022 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 pp 118 119 Ni olvido ni venganza Mesa promete justicia en El Alto Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 18 October 2003 Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 15 December 2021 Crespo Luis 19 October 2003 Written at La Paz Mesa ni olvido ni venganza BBC Mundo in Spanish London Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 15 December 2021 Azcui Mabel 14 October 2004 Written at La Paz El Parlamento de Bolivia autoriza un juicio politico contra el ex presidente Sanchez de Lozada El Pais in Spanish Madrid ISSN 1134 6582 Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Historico juicio a ex presidente de Bolivia El Universo in Spanish Guayaquil 15 October 2004 Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Medinaceli Ruben 20 February 2019 Impuestazo de febrero 2003 el fracaso del neoliberalismo Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 Retrieved 19 December 2021 Staff writer 1 February 2004 Written at La Paz Mesa lanza programa economico con austeridad y nuevos impuestos El Universo in Spanish Guayaquil EFE Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Bolivia presenta plan economico BBC Mundo in Spanish London 2 February 2004 Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 151 Bolivia Government budget deficit countryeconomy com Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert Carlos D 31 July 2004 Decreto Supremo N 27650 Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Soto Rios 2007 pp 140 141 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 172 Quiroga Ramirez Jorge 2 August 2002 Ley N 2410 Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Arraras amp Deheza 2005 p 164 Mesa Gisbert Carlos D 20 February 2004 Ley N 2631 Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Bolivia reforma su Constitucion BBC Mundo in Spanish London 20 February 2004 Archived from the original on 26 February 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Nohlen Dieter 2005 Elections in the Americas A Data Handbook Vol 2 South America Oxford University Press pp 133 140 141 ISBN 978 0 19 928358 3 Retrieved 5 January 2022 a b Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 157 Mesa Gisbert Carlos D 13 April 2003 Decreto Supremo N 27449 Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 a b Arraras amp Deheza 2005 p 165 Webber 2010 p 55 Organizaciones sociales llaman a boicotear el referendum Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 6 July 2004 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Staff writer 6 July 2004 Written at La Paz Lider aymara llama al desacato civil en Bolivia ABC Color in Spanish Asuncion Agence France Presse Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Arraras amp Deheza 2005 pp 166 167 Arostegui Martin 16 July 2004 Written at La Paz High security for Bolivia gas referendum United Press International Boca Raton Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Arraras amp Deheza 2005 pp 167 168 Bolivian president hails gas referendum win The Guardian London 19 July 2004 Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Forero Juan 19 July 2004 Bolivians Support Gas Plan And Give President a Lift The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Mesa se enfrenta al Congreso por la ley de ejecucion del Referendum Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 20 August 2004 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 167 La presion social apura el paso de los diputados La Razon in Spanish La Paz 20 October 2004 Archived from the original on 22 October 2004 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Azcui Mabel 21 October 2004 El Congreso boliviano reta al Gobierno con una nueva ley de hidrocarburos El Pais in Spanish Madrid ISSN 1134 6582 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Arraras amp Deheza 2005 pp 171 172 a b Webber 2010 pp 60 61 Mensaje del Presidente Carlos Mesa anunciando su renuncia Bolivia com in Spanish La Paz 6 March 2005 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2021 It is very comfortable to coup the government it is the most comfortable thing in the world it is a very profitable business it is practiced every day This is the country of ultimatums this is the country of if you don t do this I am very sorry but you will have consequences this is the country of people who get involved with dynamite to demand that we do whatever comes to their mind good bad or fair I am not going to continue with that logic because Bolivia cannot be governed by that logic Staff writer 7 March 2005 Written at La Paz Carlos Mesa pondra su renuncia hoy ante el Congreso de Bolivia La Jornada in Spanish Mexico City Agence France Presse and Deutsche Presse Agentur Retrieved 22 December 2021 Presidente de Bolivia anuncio ayer su renuncia El Universo in Spanish Guayaquil 7 March 2005 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Webber 2010 p 63 Mesa negocio logro un acuerdo y fue ratificado por el Parlamento La Razon in Spanish 9 March 2005 Archived from the original on 11 March 2005 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Mesa to stay on as Bolivia leader BBC News London 9 March 2005 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 a b c Zuniga Diego 16 October 2019 Carlos Mesa rival de Evo aliado de Evo rival de Evo Deutsche Welle in Spanish Berlin Retrieved 16 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 pp 194 195 Opposition ends Bolivia blockades BBC News London 17 March 2005 Archived from the original on 30 December 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 168 Ruiz Alvaro 16 May 2005 Promulgan cuestionada ley de hidrocarburos en Bolivia Laredo Morning Times in Spanish La Paz Associated Press Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Azcui Mabel 17 May 2005 El Congreso de Bolivia promulga la polemica Ley de Hidrocarburos El Pais in Spanish Madrid ISSN 1134 6582 Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 216 Autonomias Mesa propugna la descentralizacion total del pais Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 20 April 2004 Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert Carlos D 2 April 2004 Decreto Supremo N 27431 Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert Carlos D 19 April 2004 Decreto Supremo N 27457 Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Pena Hasbun Paula 7 July 2019 La agenda de junio 15 anos de la propuesta autonomica El Deber in Spanish Santa Cruz de la Sierra Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 221 Se calienta el clima social en Bolivia por alzas de carburantes Midland Reporter Telegram in Spanish 2 January 2005 Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Staff writer 4 January 2005 Written at La Paz Carlos Mesa enfrenta crisis tras subir los combustibles Hoy in Spanish Santo Domingo EFE Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Bolivian fuel protests escalate BBC News London 22 January 2005 Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Villegas Rene 25 January 2005 Bolivian civic leaders protesters push for autonomy Houston Chronicle La Paz Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 pp 225 227 Staff writer 29 January 2005 Written at Santa Cruz de la Sierra El mayor departamento de Bolivia proclama un gobierno regional autonomo del poder central El Mundo in Spanish Madrid EFE Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Marirrodriga Jorge 28 January 2005 Una multitud proclama la autonomia de la region boliviana de Santa Cruz El Pais in Spanish Madrid ISSN 1134 6582 Archived from the original on 28 December 2021 Retrieved 26 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert Carlos D 28 January 2005 Decreto Supremo N 27988 Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 30 December 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 290 Staff writer 8 April 2005 Written at La Paz Bolivia celebrara el 12 de agosto sus primeras elecciones de prefectos El Mundo in Spanish Madrid EFE Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 26 December 2021 Mesa por Constituyente y delega las autonomias El Universo in Spanish Guayaquil 12 February 2005 Archived from the original on 26 December 2021 Retrieved 26 December 2021 Argentina unblocks agreement with Bolivia on gas sales Ambito Financiero Buenos Aires 15 April 2004 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Kirchner y Mesa tras acuerdo sobre gas La Nacion in Spanish San Jose 19 April 2004 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Zuazo Alvaro 24 March 2004 Bolivia ni una molecula de gas a Chile Plainview Daily Herald in Spanish Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Kirchner llegara a Bolivia este jueves y Lula vuelve en agosto Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 17 July 2004 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Argentina asegura suministro de gas boliviano El Universo in Spanish Guayaquil 14 October 2004 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Staff writer 8 June 2015 Written at La Paz Mesa confirma que ex presidente Lagos ofrecio a Bolivia una salida soberana al mar Correo del Sur in Spanish Sucre Agencia Boliviana de Informacion Archived from the original on 28 December 2021 Retrieved 28 December 2021 Figueroa Pla 2007 pp 372 373 Mundo politico aprueba examen de Lagos en Cumbre de Monterrey El Mostrador in Spanish Santiago 15 January 2004 Archived from the original on 30 December 2021 Retrieved 28 December 2021 Congreso de Bolivia Demanda maritima es irrenunciable El Mostrador in Spanish Santiago 21 January 2004 Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Aznarez Juan Jesus 12 January 2004 Bolivia vincula su futuro a tener una salida al mar El Pais in Spanish Madrid ISSN 1134 6582 Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Figueroa Pla 2007 pp 375 382 Bolivia y Peru firmaran acuerdo de Mercado Comun en agosto del 2004 El Universo in Spanish Guayaquil 5 November 2003 Archived from the original on 29 December 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Mesa y Toledo inician conversaciones sobre el puerto el 4 de agosto Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 23 July 2004 Archived from the original on 30 December 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Hennessy Hannah 4 August 2004 Written at Lima Bolivia signs big gas export deal BBC News London Archived from the original on 29 December 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Mesa Lula y Toledo inauguran obras conjuntas en frontera Laredo Morning Times in Spanish 10 August 2004 Archived from the original on 29 December 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Azcui Mabel 16 March 2005 Bolivia aprueba la polemica ley de hidrocarburos en plena crisis El Pais in Spanish Madrid ISSN 1134 6582 Archived from the original on 30 December 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Congreso boliviano rechazo adelantar elecciones y Mesa no dejara el poder El Universo in Spanish Guayaquil 18 March 2005 Archived from the original on 30 December 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 292 Mesa quiere reunir hasta 100 personas en el Encuentro por la Unidad Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 12 May 2002 Archived from the original on 2 January 2022 Retrieved 1 January 2022 El Congreso declino asistir a Encuentro Nacional por la Unidad Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 12 May 2005 Archived from the original on 31 December 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Staff writer 14 May 2005 Written at La Paz Mesa suspende convocatoria al dialogo por la unidad en Bolivia ABC Color in Spanish Asuncion EFE Archived from the original on 31 December 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Forero Juan 4 June 2005 Bolivian Offers Reform Plan to Protesters Seeking Autonomy The New York Times Bogota ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert Carlos D 2 June 2005 Decreto Supremo N 28195 Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 5 January 2022 Retrieved 4 January 2022 Staff writer 7 June 2005 Written at La Paz Carlos Mesa renuncia a Presidencia de Bolivia La Nacion in Spanish San Jose Reuters and EFE Archived from the original on 8 October 2021 Retrieved 19 October 2021 Staff writer 7 June 2005 Written at La Paz Bolivia Mesa pide a Vaca Diez y Cossio que renuncien a la sucesion constitucional ReliefWeb in Spanish New York City Archived from the original on 5 January 2022 Retrieved 4 January 2022 Staff writer 10 June 2005 Written at La Paz Los titulares de las Camaras de Bolivia renuncian a suceder a Mesa si el Congreso acepta su renuncia El Mundo Madrid Archived from the original on 5 January 2022 Retrieved 4 January 2022 Rodriguez asume presidencia de Bolivia Deutsche Welle in Spanish Berlin Reuters 10 June 2005 Archived from the original on 13 January 2022 Retrieved 4 January 2022 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 317 Staff writer 5 December 2012 Written at La Paz Carlos Mesa es Premio Nacional de Periodismo 2012 Los Tiempos in Spanish Cochabamba Archived from the original on 30 December 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Carlos Mesa es Premio Nacional de periodismo 2012 Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 5 December 2012 Archived from the original on 30 December 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Presidente Morales invita a Carlos Mesa a encargarse de explicar la Demanda Maritima ante el mundo Direccion Estrategica de Reivindicacion Maritima in Spanish La Paz 28 April 2014 Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Exmandatario boliviano Carlos Mesa explicara demanda contra Chile BBC Mundo in Spanish London 29 April 2014 Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Mealla Luis Atahuichi Ruben 29 April 2014 El Presidente designa a Mesa y refuerza la estrategia ante la CIJ La Razon in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Carlos Mesa no tendra cargo diplomatico ni recibira salario por representar a Bolivia en tema maritimo Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz 29 April 2014 Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 a b Carlos Mesa un intelectual en continua adaptacion La Publica in Spanish Archived from the original on 14 May 2022 Retrieved 13 May 2022 Q Armando 23 May 2014 Mesa decide aprovechar las dos jornadas de la Cumbre G77 para posicionar el tema mar Oxigeno in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Arinez Ruben 30 April 2014 Carlos Mesa El G77 China debe tener el tema del mar como un aspecto fundamental La Razon La Paz Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Bolivia entrego el Libro del mar en el G77 y se alista gira mundial America Economia in Spanish Santiago 17 June 2014 Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Staff writer 16 June 2014 Written at La Paz Bolivia presenta el Libro del Mar con la historia de su reclamo a Chile Ultima Hora Asuncion Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Claves para entender el caso Quiborax un juicio en el que Bolivia pierde us 42 6 millones Los Tiempos in Spanish Cochabamba 13 June 2018 Archived from the original on 30 December 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Mesa criticado por Morales responde que el mar esta por encima de todo Que Pasa in Spanish Raleigh EFE 1 November 2016 Archived from the original on 1 January 2022 Retrieved 1 January 2022 Mesa Volveria a ser vocero maritimo una y 200 veces mas Correo del Sur in Spanish Sucre 21 August 2019 Archived from the original on 1 January 2022 Retrieved 1 January 2022 Carlos Mesa viajara a La Haya para escuchar el fallo de la demanda maritima Correo del Sur in Spanish Sucre El Deber 26 September 2018 Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 1 January 2022 Artaza Francisco 29 September 2018 Carlos Mesa vocero de la demanda maritima boliviana La fuerza de Bolivia esta en someterse a la corte y acatar su fallo La Tercera in Spanish Santiago Archived from the original on 8 November 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Mitchell Charlotte 1 October 2018 Chile not obliged to negotiate sea access with Bolivia ICJ Al Jazeera Qatar Archived from the original on 2 January 2022 Retrieved 1 January 2022 Bolivia former president asks to accept the Hague ruling Deutsche Welle in Spanish Berlin 4 October 2018 Archived from the original on 13 January 2022 Retrieved 1 January 2022 Layme Beatriz 29 July 2018 Intencion de voto coloca a Morales con un 27 y a Carlos Mesa con 25 Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 9 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Carlos Mesa no hablara de politica y candidatura hasta el 1 de octubre ERBOL in Spanish La Paz 18 September 2018 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 El FRI invita a Mesa a ser su candidato el analiza la propuesta Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz 5 October 2018 Archived from the original on 9 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Bolivia el ex mandatario Carlos Mesa lanzo su candidatura presidencial para enfrentar a Evo Morales en 2019 Infobae in Spanish Buenos Aires 6 October 2018 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Bolivia Carlos Mesa rivalizara con Morales en elecciones Deutsche Welle in Spanish Berlin Archived from the original on 13 January 2022 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Layme Beatriz 7 October 2018 Mesa lanza su candidatura y llama a colectivos y partidos Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 SOL bo propone alianza a Mesa y propone agenda programatica Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz 24 October 2018 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Pomacahua Pamela 31 October 2018 Revilla firma con Mesa y deja que el elija a su acompanante Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Carlos Mesa y Luis Revilla firman alianza de cara a las elecciones primarias radioamerica net in Spanish 31 October 2018 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Mesa y Revilla oficializan la alianza politica Comunidad Ciudadana ante el TSE Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 13 November 2018 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Cuiza Paulo 14 November 2018 UN y Democratas oficializan alianza Bolivia Dice No y se abren a recibir cualquier candidatura La Razon in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 UCS ve dificil una alianza con Mesa para el 2019 Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz 28 October 2018 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2021 Pomacahua Pamela 31 October 2018 Revilla firma con Mesa y deja que el elija a su acompanante Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Gustavo Pedraza acompanara a Mesa como candidato a la Vicepresidencia Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 27 November 2018 Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Tapia Guadalupe 28 July 2019 Carlos Mesa inicia campana puerta a puerta en Tarija con mas de 1 000 voluntarios de CC La Razon in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Carlos Mesa inicia en Tarija su campana electoral y anuncia una gira nacional Los Tiempos in Spanish Cochabamba 2 May 2019 Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 a b Gonzalez Diego 9 October 2019 Carlos Mesa No reconozco la candidatura de Evo Morales Deutsche Welle in Spanish Berlin Archived from the original on 13 January 2022 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Bolivia Evo Morales leads election faces presidential runoff Deutsche Welle Berlin 21 October 2019 Archived from the original on 13 January 2022 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Mesa campaigned on a platform of boosting environmental protection strengthening democratic institutions and tackling corruption Staff writer 21 October 2019 Written at La Paz Bolivia s Evo Morales likely forced to presidential runoff NBC New York City Associated Press Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 President Evo Morales appears to have failed to get enough votes to avoid the first runoff in his nearly 14 years in power Staff writer 21 October 2019 Written at La Paz Mesa llama a la movilizacion ciudadana para evitar un fraude en Bolivia Opinion in Spanish Cochabamba EFE Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Morales had always won with a majority in the first round in three consecutive elections so if a new appointment with the polls is confirmed it would be the first Bolivia Evo Morales leads election faces presidential runoff Deutsche Welle Berlin 21 October 2019 Archived from the original on 13 January 2022 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Staff writer 21 October 2019 Written at La Paz Mesa llama a la movilizacion ciudadana para evitar un fraude en Bolivia EFE in Spanish Buenos Aires Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Elecciones en Bolivia el conteo preliminar situa a Evo Morales como virtual ganador sin necesidad de segunda vuelta y en medio de denuncias de fraude BBC Mundo in Spanish London 21 October 2019 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Elecciones en Bolivia Mesa denuncia un fraude escandaloso en el recuento de los votos y la OEA muestra su profunda preocupacion BBC Mundo in Spanish London 22 October 2019 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Mesa denuncia un fraude gigantesco y llama a la movilizacion permanente hasta lograr la segunda vuelta en Bolivia Europa Press in Spanish Madrid 23 October 2019 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Mesa propone nuevas elecciones y con renovado organo Electoral Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz 4 November 2019 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 El opositor Carlos Mesa pide la renuncia de Evo Morales Radio France Internationale in Spanish Paris 10 November 2019 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Mesa No tengo nada que negociar con Evo Morales Los Tiempos in Spanish Cochabamba 9 November 2019 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Minuto a minuto Evo Morales renuncia a la presidencia de Bolivia CN N in Spanish Atlanta 10 November 2019 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Staff writer 14 November 2019 Written at La Paz Mesa respalda a Anez pero no participara en el Gobierno interino de Bolivia La Vanguardia in Spanish Barcelona EFE Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 24 December 2021 Anez Mesa se opuso a que Adriana Salvatierra asuma la presidencia en sucesion constitucional Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 11 June 2021 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Corz Carlos Sanabria Ghilka 13 June 2021 Mesa y su entorno callan sobre las revelaciones de Anez y Morales lo llama el principal golpista de 2019 La Razon in Spanish La Paz Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 24 December 2021 Tedesqui Vargas Luis Marcelo 19 October 2021 Mesa pregunta Por que Adriana Salvatierra y Susana Rivero no asumieron la sucesion El Deber in Spanish Santa Cruz de la Sierra Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 24 December 2021 Sardina Marina 3 December 2019 Carlos Mesa se postula como candidato a los proximos comicios de Bolivia France24 in Spanish Paris EFE Archived from the original on 22 October 2020 Retrieved 24 December 2021 Mesa considera que Anez comete una gran equivocacion al postularse a la Presidencia Los Tiempos in Spanish Cochabamba 25 January 2020 Archived from the original on 25 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Se inicia la carrera electoral con 7 frentes en lucha contra el MAS InfoTarija in Spanish Tarija 2 February 2020 Archived from the original on 13 January 2022 Retrieved 25 December 2021 La dispersion del voto abre la posibilidad para el retorno del MAS al Gobierno El Deber in Spanish Santa Cruz de la Sierra 7 September 2020 Archived from the original on 25 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Pizarro Carlos 13 October 2020 Bolivia expresidente Quiroga retira candidatura a presidente para debilitar a partido de Morales Radio France Internationale in Spanish Paris Archived from the original on 25 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Valdez Carlos 23 October 2020 Written at La Paz Final count gives leftist big victory in Bolivia election Associated Press New York City Archived from the original on 25 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Munoz Pandiella Lluis 19 October 2020 La oposicion reconoce el triunfo de Luis Arce y Evo Morales se plantea volver a Bolivia France24 in Spanish Paris Archived from the original on 25 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Baldivieso Gina 24 October 2020 Written at La Paz Mesa el intelectual que no pudo conectar con las clases populares bolivianas La Vanguardia in Spanish Barcelona Archived from the original on 25 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 O Boyle Brendan 23 September 2020 Bolivia Has Changed Since 2003 Has Carlos Mesa Americas Quarterly New York City Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Quien es Carlos Mesa el principal candidato enfrentado al delfin de Evo Morales en las elecciones presidenciales de este domingo en Bolivia El Universo in Spanish Guayaquil Associated Press 16 October 2020 Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Las 15 Frases mas destacadas de Carlos Mesa en Momento Clave El Pais in Spanish Tarija 1 October 2020 Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Mesa Gisbert 2010 p 115 Mesa propone promulgar una ley que garantice la separacion entre el Estado y la religion Correo del Sur in Spanish Sucre 21 December 2018 Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Vasquez Tuffi Are 18 October 2019 Written at Santa Cruz de la Sierra Entrevista exclusiva a Carlos Mesa Hace mucho que Evo Morales dejo de representar los intereses populares Infobae in Spanish Buenos Aires Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Staff writer 28 June 2019 Written at Santa Cruz de la Sierra Mesa promete retomar relaciones con EEUU y cortar vinculos con Maduro Correo del Sur in Spanish Sucre El Deber Archived from the original on 25 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Mesa exige al gobierno condenar a Rusia Tuto insta a socialistas defender la soberania ucraniana ERBOL in Spanish La Paz 24 February 2022 Archived from the original on 24 February 2022 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Carlos Mesa acusa a Evo Morales y al MAS de pervertir la justicia El Potosi in Spanish Agencia de Noticias Fides 31 January 2022 Archived from the original on 8 February 2022 Retrieved 24 February 2022 CC propone reformar la justicia del pais en 90 dias e iniciar con el cambio del fiscal general Agencia de Noticias Fides in Spanish La Paz 23 August 2021 Archived from the original on 24 February 2022 Retrieved 24 February 2022 CC plantea ajustes a 9 articulos de la CPE para renovar la Fiscalia y el organo Judicial Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz 2 February 2022 Archived from the original on 17 February 2022 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Mesa cree que es posible compatibilizar desarrollo agricola con proteccion del bosque Opinion in Spanish Cochabamba 24 August 2020 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 24 December 2021 Carlos Mesa entre los 100 latinos mas influyentes ante la crisis climatica Pagina Siete in Spanish La Paz 22 October 2020 Archived from the original on 24 December 2021 Retrieved 24 December 2021 The 100 Latinos Most Committed to Climate Action sachamama org 2020 Archived from the original on 15 April 2021 Retrieved 15 June 2022 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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