Galo
Plaza
differed
from
previous
Ecuadorian
presidents.
The
son
of
former
President
Plaza
Gutierrez,
he
had
been
born
in
the
United
States,
where
he
also
attended
several
universities.
His
ties
to
the
United
States
grew
even
closer
as
a
result
of
serving
there
as
ambassador
under
President
Arroyo
del
Rio.
These
links,
as
Pike
points
out,
"rendered
him
vulnerable
to
charges
by
Velasco
Ibarra
and
other
demagogic
opponents
of
being
the
lackey
of
U.S.
imperialism."
Galo
Plaza
was
not
a
professional
politician,
but
a
gentleman
farmer
with
a
sizable
cattle
ranch
near
Quito,
where
he
customarily
spent
weekends
throughout
his
four
years
as
president.
Galo
Plaza
brought
a
developmentalist
and
technocratic
emphasis
to
Ecuadorian
government.
He
invited
a
wide
variety
of
foreign
experts
in
economic
development
and
in
governmental
administration
to
recommend
and
catalog
reforms
in
both
areas.
In
large
part
because
of
a
lack
of
political
will
within
either
the
executive
or
the
legislature,
however,
virtually
none
of
the
recommended
reforms
was
enacted.
Nevertheless,
the
economy
experienced
a
marked
improvement,
with
inflation
finally
slowing
down
and
both
government
budget
and
foreign
currency
accounts
balancing
for
the
first
time
in
many
years.
This
achievement
was
even
more
remarkable
in
light
of
the
series
of
major
earthquakes,
landslides,
and
floods
suffered
by
Ecuador
in
1949
and
1950.
No
doubt
Galo
Plaza's
most
important
contribution
to
Ecuadorian
political
culture
was
his
commitment
to
the
principles
and
practices
of
democracy.
Galo
Plaza
endorsed
such
democratic
guarantees
as
freedom
of
the
press
and
the
freedom
of
opponents
to
voice
their
opinions,
to
assemble
for
political
purposes
without
fear
of
being
jailed
or
worse,
and
to
be
elected
to
the
legislature
without
fear
of
being
defrauded
or
arbitrarily
dismissed.
Galo
Plaza
was
able
to
create
a
mystique
around
the
idea
of
his
completing
his
term
in
office,
something
no
president
had
accomplished
since
1924,
and
this
mystique
no
doubt
helped
him
achieve
his
goal.
As
Galo
Plaza
readily
admitted,
however,
his
greatest
asset,
both
politically
and
economically,
was
the
onset
of
the
nation's
banana
boom,
as
diseases
plaguing
plantations
in
Central
America
turned
Ecuador
into
an
alternative
supplier
to
the
huge
United
States
market.
Ecuador's
banana
exports
grew
from
US$2
million
to
US$20
million
between
1948
and
1952.
During
these
years,
Ecuador
also
benefited
from
sizable
price
increases--generated
by
the
Korean
War--for
its
commodity
exports.
A
proof
of
the
politically
stabilizing
effect
of
the
banana
boom
of
the
1950s
is
that
even
Velasco,
who
in
1952
was
elected
president
for
the
third
time,
managed
to
serve
out
a
full
four-year
term.
He
continued
to
spend
as
before--building
bridges,
roads,
and
schools
at
will
and
rewarding
his
political
supporters
[including,
this
time,
the
military]
with
jobs,
salary
increases,
and
weapons--
but,
in
contrast
to
his
previous
times
in
office,
there
were
now
sufficient
funds
to
pay
for
everything.
Always
the
master
populist,
Velasco
[who
by
now
liked
to
be
known
as
"the
National
Personification"]
again
came
to
power
with
the
support
of
the
common
man,
this
time
through
the
vehicle
of
the
Guayaquil-based
Concentration
of
Popular
Forces
[Concentracion
de
Fuerzas
Populares--CFP].
Once
in
office,
however,
he
arrested
and
deported
the
CFP
boss,
Carlos
Guevara
Moreno,
together
with
several
other
party
leaders.
Guevara
Moreno
reassumed
control
of
the
CFP
in
1955
following
a
three-year
exile.
Velasco's
subsequent
party
support
during
the
1950s
came
from
the
Conservatives,
the
conservative
Social
Christian
Movement
[Movimiento
Social
Cristiano--MSC],
and
the
highly
nationalistic,
anticommunist,
quasi-fascist
Ecuadorian
Nationalist
Revolutionary
Action
[Accion
Revolucionaria
Nacionalista
Ecuatoriana--ARNE].
On
repeated
occasions,
members
of
ARNE
acted
as
thugs
and
shock
troops,
attacking
students,
labor
unions,
and
the
press.
In
1955
Velasco
also
chose
to
pick
a
fight
with
the
United
States.
In
the
opening
round
of
what
would
later
become
known
as
the
"tuna
war,"
Ecuadorian
officials
seized
two
fishing
boats
carrying
the
United
States
flag,
charging
them
with
fishing
inside
the
200-nauticalmile
limit
claimed
by
Ecuador
as
territorial
seas
under
its
sovereignty.
In
1956
Camilo
Ponce
Enriquez,
the
MSC
founder
who
had
served
in
Velasco's
cabinet,
assumed
the
presidency
after
a
close
election
replete
with
allegations
of
fraud.
Although
late
support
from
Velasco
proved
crucial
to
Ponce's
victory,
shortly
afterward
"the
National
Personification"
became
the
principal
opponent
of
the
new
chief
executive.
In
a
display
of
statesmanship
and
political
acumen,
Ponce
co-opted
the
Liberal
opposition
by
including
it,
along
with
Conservatives
and
the
MSC,
in
his
cabinet.
Although
Ponce
did
not
enact
the
Social
Christian
reforms
of
which
he
spoke
vaguely
during
the
campaign,
the
relative
political
calm
that
prevailed
during
his
four
years
in
office
was,
in
itself,
an
accomplishment
given
the
worsening
economic
situation.
Ponce's
term
saw
the
end
of
the
banana
boom
that
had
sustained
more
than
a
decade
of
constitutional
rule.
Falling
export
prices
led
to
rising
unemployment
and
a
social
malaise
that
briefly
erupted
into
riots
in
1959.
By
the
following
year,
the
effects
of
the
discontent
were
ready
to
be
exploited
by
the
populist
appeal
of
the
irrepressible
Velasco,
who
was
elected
with
his
widest
margin
of
victory
ever.
Velasco's
fourth
turn
in
the
presidency
initiated
a
renewal
of
crisis,
instability,
and
military
domination
and
ended
conjecture
that
the
political
system
had
matured
or
developed
a
democratic
mould.
Last
Updated
24th
July
2006
(DLW)
| |Source: U.S. Library of Congress||| |
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