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Deportes / Panama Post: informes del enfriador de agua

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Panama Post: informes del enfriador de agua

Publicado 2011/04/28 01:21:32


12/24/2008

ID DOC: 184867
FECHA: 0000-00-00 00:00:00
FUENTE: Embassy Panama
PRIVACIDAD: CONFIDENTIAL
REFERENCIA: VZCZCXYZ0000RR RUEHWEBDE RUEHZP #0008/01 0052139ZNY SSSSS ZZHR 052139Z JAN 09FM AMEMBASSY PANAMATO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 2808INFO RUEHBO/AMEMBASSY BOGOTA 2734RUEHSJ/AMEMBASSY SAN JOSE 1960RHMFISS/COMDT COGARD WASHINGTON DCRHMFISS/DIRJIATF SOUTH


C O N F I D E N T I A L PANAMA 000944



SIPDIS



DEPT PASS TO WHADP COLLECTIVE



E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/22/2018

TAGS: PGOV, PM

SUBJECT: PANAMA POST: THE WATER COOLER REPORTS



Classified By: POLCOUNS Brian R. Naranjo. Reasons: 1.4 (b),

(c), and (d)



-------

Summary

-------



1. (SBU/NF) Welcome to the second edition of the revamped

Panama Post, a new collaborative effort between Embassy

Panama's Political Section (POL) and the Open Source Center

(OSC), that we are going to call "The Report from the Water

Cooler." OSC provides POL a steady stream of current news,

the kind of fodder that serves as the nucleus for the chatter

around POL's water cooler where we banter about the latest

tidbits that we have collected from our contacts. OSC and

POL hope to provide you, our loyal readers, an opportunity to

listen in to some of the highlights from our water cooler

chatter. In this edition of the Panama Post, our headlines

are:



- Democratic Change (CD) presidential candidate Ricardo

Martinelli cruising on 10 point lead as speculation

regarding VP pick increases;

- Governing Revolutionary Democratic Party (PRD) reacts with

criticism over surprise naming by Balbina Herrera of Panama

City Mayor (and former contender for the PRD's presidential

nomination) Juan Carlos Navarro as her VP running mate;

- Gaffe by Panamanian Ambassador to Belgium (and brother of

PRD presidential candidate Balbina Herrera) Pablo Garrido may

cost GOP USD 30 million; and

- As Panamenista presidential candidate Juan Carlos Varela

lags badly in polls, are panamenistas getting itchy feet?



Those not familiar with OSC's excellent unclassified

summaries of open source media should log on to

www.opensource.gov and set up an account for daily updates on

issues, regions or countries of your choice. OSC analysts

follow open source material on a daily basis providing

translations of timely news stories and analysis. OSC can

also be a partner in providing contributions across the

Hemisphere and around the world. Those of you not signed up

for OSC accounts are missing out on their daily reporting on

developments in your own backyard. We here in POL, hope that

our colleagues at posts throughout the Hemisphere can tap

into OSC's resources to more effectively track the day-to-day

in their countries; contact POLCOUNS Brian Naranjo to find

out how to get started. END SUMMARY.



--------------------------------------------- -

Martinelli cruises on 10 Point Lead; VP Pick?

--------------------------------------------- -



2. (SBU//NF) If the elections were held in December,

Democratic Change (CD) presidential candidate Ricardo

Martinelli would win by ten or more points over governing

Revolutionary Democratic Party (PRD) presidential candidate

Balbina Herrera, according to polling data published in

Panama City media over the past couple of weeks (SEPTEL).

Martinelli, in December, was the preferred presidential pick

of roughly 40 percent of voters, reflecting a steady growth

of three to four points monthly since September. Front

runner Martinelli could not be reached for comment on this

surge in the polls as he was enjoying a brief vacation aboard

Royal Caribbean's Enchantment of the Seas on its maiden

voyage from Colon, Panama to Cartagena and the Netherlands

Antilles. Herrera's hoped for bounce in the polls in the

wake of naming Panama City Mayor and her former contender for

the PRD nomination Juan Carlos Navarro did not materialize.

Instead, Herrera who trailed Martinelli and took in only 31.4

percent support in the Dichter and Neira poll, fell 2 points

from November. Panamenista presidential candidate Juan

Carlos Varela garnered only 16.8 percent support trailing in

a distant third place. Moral Vanguard of the Nation (VMP)

presidential candidate and former president Guillermo Endara

just barely beat the margin of error by 0.1 percent with 3.0

percent support. Speculation now turns to whom Martinelli

will select as his VP running mate. Patriotic Union (UP)

president and former FM Jose Raul Mulino put down a marker

that, in keeping with CD's alliance with UP, Martinelli's VP

had to be a UP member and added that he himself would be

willing to take the job, if offered. Other names mentioned

in the press include UP VP Anibal Galindo, former Panamenista

presidential nomination contender Alberto Vallarino, and TVN

morning news show star Lucy Molinar. Vallarino published a

letter in multiple Panama City dailies asserting his loyalty

to Panamenista primary victor Varela and underscoring that he

could not legally switch parties to enable him to accept the

VP nomination.



3. (C) Comment: "We want to win," Martinelli campaign

advisor Jimmy Papadimitriu scoffed when asked by POLCOUNS on

December 17 whether Mulino would get the VP nod. Mulino, who

walked into Papadimitriu's office moments later, was

ebullient and told POLCOUNS, "Martinelli is going to beat

Balbina." Later, Papadimitriu explained that any VP

candidate would simply need to register as a UP member if not

already part of the party; "Ricardo is strong right now, and

the 'patrioticos' really do not have the strength to dictate

the veep slot." Before ducking into a strategy session with

Mulino and Galindo who had just arrived, Martinelli himself

subsequently confirmed that he was courting Oprah-esque

Molinar to run with him. "She would a really strong force

against Balbina," Martinelli explained. "She's black,

educated, successful, from Colon, and has built a reputation

on her show as somebody who has the average Panamanians

interests at heart." The Panama Post hears though that

Molinar, to date, has not been interested in a life in

politics. Martinelli must make his VP choice before the

CD-UP convention on January 11.



--------------------------------------------- -----------

PRD Reacts to Surprise Naming of Navarro as VP Candidate

--------------------------------------------- -----------



4. (SBU/NF) PRD presidential candidate Balbina Herrera's

unexpected late-November decision to name Panama City Mayor

and former PRD presidential nomination challenger Juan Carlos

Navarro as her VP running mate drew criticism from within

this party's normally disciplined and unified ranks. One

unnamed campaign advisor told the press that he was surprised

that that the decision had been made so quickly despite

Herrera's earlier statements that she would not name her

running mate until late December or early January and that

other VP candidates were still being evaluated. Boris

Moreno, who claimed to be an insider on Herrera's strategy

team, stated that Navarro's appointment was "a high-risk

political move that was not discussed" within the party.

Allegedly, Herrera's weakening ranking in the polls pushed

Herrera to move up her VP announcement. Other PRD insiders

-- unnamed, of course -- told the press that that Herrera was

trying to distance herself from President and PRD SecGen

Martin Torrijos by signaling that she, not the President, was

calling the shots for her campaign. Navarro is widely

believed to want to run for president in 2014 while rumors

resurfaced that Torrijos would seek a constitutional reform

to allow him too to run in 2014, five years earlier than

currently permitted. Torrijos' remarks that he would not

"allow" Herrera to lose the election, drew fire from the

opposition: former President Mireya Moscoso asserted that

Torrijos' remarks were "mistaken" and raised suspicions; CD

talking head Roberto Henriquez said the CD would "defend its

votes like lions" despite the PRD's history of fraud, ballot

box theft and other electoral crimes; Varela said Torrijos'

remarks "smacked of trickery;" and Martinelli said Torrijos'

remarks did not worry him as he Martinelli was focused on

generating jobs and addressing Panama's rising crime.



5. (C) Comment: To date, Herrera does not appear to have

benefited from any "Navarro effect" by naming the more

moderate, business friendly, upper class, Panama City mayor

to her ticket. Polling from early December suggest that

one-fourth to one-third of the PRD believed that adding

Navarro to the ticket would unify the party, while voters at

large believed that naming Navarro to the ticket forebode an

opposition victory (SEPTEL). "The real battle being waged

right now inside the PRD is for control of the party," PRD

leader and former Executive Secretary of the Council for

Public Safety and National Defense (CSPDN) Javier Martinez

Acha told POLOFFs December 19. "Torrijos is weak, so Balbina

and Juan Carlos are angling for control of the party."

(Note: Herrera is PRD President, and Navarro is the PRD

National Executive Committee (CEN) First Sub-Secretary.) "If

Herrera loses, Navarro wins," explained Martinez Acha.

Acknowledging POLCOUNS's remark that that would be a highly

cynical political strategy, Martinez Acha responded, "Juan

Carlos is a highly cynical politician." Navarro's primary

campaign manager Ivan Gonzalez told POLCOUNS on December 23

that Navarro himself was surprised when Herrera actually

offered him the VP slot. "Juan Carlos told Balbina on

November 25 that he would accept the vice presidential

nomination if she offered it to him by November 30; after

that he would not and she'd be on her own," Gonzalez

explained. "Balbina is so weak in the polls that she had no

other option than to offer the job to Navarro. She needed to

stop the bleeding." Gonzalez also portrayed the

Herrera-Navarro alliance as an effort to counter Torrijos and

First VP and FM (and Navarro's cousin) Samuel Lewis in the

struggle to take control of the PRD. Absent from Gonzalez's

remarks was any sense of true warmth and affinity between

Herrera and Navarro. Indeed, POLCOUNS was left with the

impression that Navarro was content with his position as

regardless of whether Herrera wins or loses, Navarro would

come out on top. Whether Herrera wins or loses, Navarro

would have positioned himself as a valiant PRD loyalist who

did his duty to resurect a flagging Herrera candidacy, weaken

Torrijos' standing in the party, and position himself to run

in 2014 as the PRD standard bearer.



-------------------------------------

Balbina's Brother Throws Her a Doozie

-------------------------------------



6. (SBU//NF) Widely believed to have been asleep at the

switch, Panamanian Ambassador to Belgium and Herrera's

brother Pablo Garrido failed to notify the MFA and Ministry

of Industry and International Commerce (MICI) in a timely

manner that Panama needed to file to renew its General System

of Preferences (GSP) privileges with the European Commission.

Trade relations with the EU became strained when the GOP

issued a paid communique in the local media effectively

blaming the EU for the mistake. On December 11, the EU

announced that Panama's exclusion from the preferential trade

provisions program was "irrevocable" and that Panama could

re-apply in 2010. Attempting to restore its standard with

Panamanian exporters, the GOP announced that it would expend

some USD 30 million to compensate exporters for the higher

duties that they would face. Stating that Garrido received

his ambassadorial appointment because of his ties of kinship

with Herrera, not because of his talent, Varela demanded

Garrido's removal.



7. (C) Comment: Garrido's gaffe will not lead directly harm

Herrera's standing per se, but it will contribute to a

growing perception that Torrijos' PRD government is the gang

that cannot shoot straight. Add Garrido's gaffe to the pile

of PRD-negative stories like Panama City's growing crime

wave, problems in the Darien, and high prices for food

staples. According to MFA insider Ernesto Cerrud, Garrido

and Herrera's daughter who also works at the Embassy in

Brussels were both AWOL working on Herrera's campaign when

the GSP issue came to a head. Herrera's kin, Cerrud

explained, had left the embassy's cultural attache at the

helm in their absence. Other similar stories of incompetence

and/or malfeasance have also dogged Herrera's son and

campaign advisor Virgilio Perpinan including: a lingering

court case over two shipments of dioxin tainted onions and

her son's possible involvement in the importation of

mislabeled toxin diethylene glycol that wound up in

Panamanian cough syrup resulting in dozens of deaths. While

able to choose her VP running mate, Herrera is also probably

wishing she were able to choose her kin.



---------------------------------------------

MOLIRENistas, Panamenistas Begin to Jump Ship

---------------------------------------------



8. (SBU//NF) Panama City-based media are rife with

speculation that Panamenista opinion leaders are abandoning

Varela's ship. Panamenista member and former Director General

of the Technical Judicial Police (PTJ, now party of the

Panamanian National Policy and called the Directorate for

Judicial Investigations or DIJ) Jaime Abad publicly enrolled

as a member of the CD. Abad cited his interest in advancing

a new security plan to fight rising delinquency, crime, and

drug trafficking. Martinelli declared that Abad's decision

to join the CD underscored that his administration would be

comprised of the best and the brightest from all political

walks of life: PRD, Panamenista, or independent.



9. (C) Comment: Abad's public enrollment with CD is only

the tip of the iceberg. Members of Panamenista alliance

partner MOLIRENA are increasingly becoming restless too.

MOLIRENA National Assembly Deputy Marylu Vallarino would soon

switch party affiliation and join CD, Papadimitriu told

POLCOUNS December 17. Other Panamenista leaders are also

quietly and not so quietly reaching out Martinelli including:

former Panamenista presidential nomination candidates Jose

Miguel Aleman (2004) and Alberto Vallarino (2008), National

Assembly deputies Jose Luis Varela (also Varela's brother)

and Alcibades Vasquez, and former president Mireya Moscoso.

As the Panama Post went to press, rumors abounded that

MOLIRENA would break its alliance the Panamenista Party

paving the way to join with the CD and UP. Press speculation

alleged that MOLIRENA President Sergio Gonzalez Ruiz would

make a final run at Varela on December 23 to urge him to step

back from his presidential aspirations. Well, on the night of

December 23, MOLIRENA's National Executive Committee (CEN)

voted (17-yes, 3-no, 3-abstain, 4-absent) to break its

alliance with the Panamenista party and to enter into

alliance with CD.

STEPHENSON

Google noticias Panamá América

Para comentar debes registrarte y completar los datos generales.

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