by Camila Escalante with Brian Mier

If the New York Times (6/7/20) has had second thoughts about its coverage of the 2019 Bolivian election and subsequent coup, it hasn’t shared them with its readers.
The New York Times (6/7/20) declared that an Organization of American States (OAS) report alleging fraud in the 2019 Bolivian presidential elections—which was used as justification for a bloody, authoritarian coup d’etat in November 2019—was fundamentally flawed.
The Times reported the findings of a new study by independent researchers; the Times brags of contributing to it by sharing data it “obtained from Bolivian electoral authorities,” though this data has been publicly available since before the 2019 coup.
The article never uses the word “coup”—it says that President Evo Morales was “push[ed]…from power with military support”—but it does acknowledge that “seven months after Mr. Morales’s downfall, Bolivia has no elected government and no official election date”:
A staunchly right-wing caretaker government, led by Jeanine Añez…has not yet fulfilled its mandate to oversee swift new elections. The new government has persecuted the former president’s supporters, stifled dissent and worked to cement its hold on power.
“Thank God for the New York Times for letting us know,” must think at least some casual readers, who trust the paper’s regular criticism of rising authoritarianism within the US—perhaps adding, “Well, I guess it’s too late to do anything about Bolivia now.”
The fact is, the Times has been patting itself on the back for acknowledging authoritarianism in neofascist regimes that it helped normalize in Latin America for at least 50 years. The only surprise to readers who are aware of this ugly truth is that this time it took so long.
It only took the Times 15 days and the arrest of 20,000 leftists, for example, to counter nine articles supportive of the April 1, 1964, Brazilian military coup (Social Science Journal, 1/97) with a warning (4/16/64) that “Brazil now has an authoritarian military government. ” As was the case with Brazil in 1964, recognizing that Bolivia has now succumbed to authoritarianism may help the New York Times’ image with progressive readers, but it doesn’t do anything for the oppressed citizens of the countries involved.
While the coup was unfolding, and when Northern solidarity for Bolivia’s Movement for Socialism government (MAS in Spanish) might have helped avert disaster, the New York Times was whistling a different tune. The day after Morales’ re-election (10/21/19), it portrayed the paramilitary putschists who were carrying out violent threats against elected officials and their families as victims of repressive police actions perpetrated by the socialist government. “Opponents of Mr. Morales angrily charged ‘fraud, fraud!’” read the post-election article:
Heavily armed police officers were deployed to the streets, where they clashed with demonstrators on Monday night, according to television news reports.
One day after Morales was removed from power, the Times (11/11/19) engaged in victim-blaming, with a news analysis headlined ‘This Will Be Forever’: How the Ambitions of Evo Morales Contributed to His Fall.” The first Indigenous president in Latin American history was not being deposed illegally, after winning a fair election, by groups of armed paramilitary thugs, amid threats of murder and rape to his family members, the Times implied; rather, he was being brought down due to his own character faults as a Machiavellian back-stabber.

Camila Escalante reporting for MintPress News (11/21/19) from El Alto, Bolivia.
I arrived in Bolivia on November 13, 2019, shortly after Jeanine Añez’ unconstitutional swearing in as unelected, interim president, on a cartoonishly oversized Bible. I was there as a reporter for MintPress News and teleSUR, and two of the active sites I reported from were in the most militantly MAS-dense areas: In Sacaba, where the coup regime’s first massacre took place on November 15, and in El Alto, where the Senkata massacre took place on November 19.
The third, and most extensively covered, resistance to the coup was in the heart of the city of La Paz, where daily protests were staged. Beyond these major conflict areas, there were large mobilizations in Norte Potosí, the rural provinces of the department of La Paz, Zona Sud of Cochabamba, Yapacani and San Julian. The vast majorities within all rural areas across the country were also in deep resistance to the coup.
The November coup represented the ousting of a government deeply embedded in the country’s Indigenous campesino and worker movements, by internal colonial-imperialist actors, led in large part by Bolivia’s fascist and neoliberal opposition sectors, most notably Luis Fernando Camacho and Carlos Mesa, who received ample support from the US government and the far-right Bolsonaro administration of Brazil. The Indigenous and social movement bases resisting the coup were deeply distrusting of Bolivian media, which they immediately deemed as having played a key role in it.
Those same groups that were hostile towards major Bolivian news networks and journalists lined up to be heard by myself and those who accompanied me, once they recognized my teleSUR press credentials. One woman attending a cabildo (mass meeting) of the Fejuves (neighborhood organizations) of El Alto detailed how her workplace, Bolivia TV, had been attacked by right-wing mobs as the coup authorities got rid of those deemed sympathizers of the constitutional government, replacing them by force almost immediately.
Indigenous Bolivian communities were at the very forefront of the protests and resistance actions against the coup, namely the blocking of key highways and roads, as in the case of Norte Potosí, the blocking of the YPFB gas plant in Senkata, and 24-hour camps blocking the entry to the Chapare province. La Paz was militarized, making it impossible to get near Plaza Murillo, the site of the Presidential Palace and the Congress. I witnessed daily violent repression by security forces against those who gathered in protest near the perimeter of the Plaza, including unions and groups such as the Bartolina Sisa Confederation, a nationwide organization of Indigenous and campesina women, and the highly organized neighborhood associations of El Alto.
One might think this kind of grassroots, pro-democracy mobilization coordinated by working-class people against an authoritarian takeover would be the type of thing the New York Times would applaud. After all, it ran over 100 articles championing Hong Kong’s protesters in the last six months of 2019 alone.

Anatoly Kurmanaev, the author of this New York Times piece (12/5/19) that ignored real-time critiques of the OAS’s complaints about the Bolivian election, was a co-author of the piece (6/7/20) acknowledging that some have “second thoughts” about the OAS attacks on Evo Morales.
As resistance grew on the streets of Bolivia, however, the New York Times only continued the rationalization of the unconstitutional, authoritarian taking of power, using the now-discredited OAS report to do so.
“Election Fraud Aided Evo Morales, International Panel Concludes,” read a December 5 article—one of several the paper ran discrediting the democratic electoral process. Like the others, it failed to challenge dubious claims by the right-wing coalition in charge of the OAS—which received $68 million, or 44% of its budget, from the Trump administration in 2017—that Evo Morales was elected via “lies, manipulation and forgery to ensure his victory.”
A newspaper that prides itself on showing the full picture could have cited the debunking of the OAS study conducted by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), an organization with two Nobel Laureate economists on its board, whose co-director Mark Weisbrot has written over 20 op-ed pieces for the New York Times. Even before the coup, CEPR (11/8/19) published an analysis of the Bolivian vote that concluded, “Neither the OAS mission nor any other party has demonstrated that there were widespread or systematic irregularities in the elections of October 20, 2019.”
The fatal flaws in the report the OAS used to subvert a member government, long obvious, are now undeniable even to the New York Times. But the paper still hasn’t acknowledged, let alone apologized for, the credulous reporting that gave it a leading role in bringing down an elected president and the violence that followed.
Note: This story was reported and written by Camila Escalante, with additional writing by Brian Mier.
ACTION ALERT: You can send a message to the New York Times at letters@nytimes.com (Twitter:@NYTimes). Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective. Feel free to leave a copy of your communication in the comments thread.





Is it credulous to believe the corpress is “credulous”, rather than complicit?
Excellent article!
This writer is not only knowledgeable of the situation in Bolivia but the regional political situation in Latin America. The US and Canada have been active supporters of this coup, and the American press is guilty of silence, a thousand times.
This writer is giving voice to those that have no voice. Thank you!
Canada’s puppet Justin Trudeau, as for Venezuela and Israel, stands alongside imperialistic USA. He is a shamefull carpetbagger!
Insightful. All the elements of a coup made in the USA and supported by the Latin American puppet governments, and Canada of course!
Its all about the element Lithium. Tech wants lots of it to feed the next ‘green’ revolution – it isn’t – lots of value for the peeps in control. Shameful.
Same as it ever was.
Science doesn’t back the conspiracy that the Coup was for lithium. Bolivia’s lithium lacks the purity and logistics to make it viable. If it were, China would have moved in a long time ago. Nor does the coup require a lithium conspiracy. The right-wing forces were never shy about wanting to get rid of Morales or Mas. The motive was always there with our without the mythical lithium riches.
A month or two after the coup, Vijay Prashad took a very perspicacious look at the economic back story, the huge lithium deposits in the country and negotiations to sell mining rights to China. I would be curious to know if the NYT ever alerted readers to the significance of the putsch with regards to control of lithium and what that did for the stock price of the Tesla Car works.
One point. The “pro” side of the coup will mention is that Morales’s election itself was illegal according to Bolivia’s constitution (written by Morales & Mas by the way). He was going for a 4th term and the constitution only allowed 3 terms.
Hind-sight is 20/20, but the neo-fascist mess would have been avoided if Morales would have groomed a successor and had that successor run. He still could have been the leader of Mas with a Mas President. He would have been a legend and the party would have won a landslide.
This is mostly a fabricated conspiracy where none was needed. The fascists were always looking for an angle and the angle wasn’t the lithium. It was Morales running for a 4th term when the constitution he and his party wrote limited him (or anyone else) to 3. It’s hard to trust any analysis that ignores this elephant in the room. Had it been anyone else in Mas, but Morales, they would have won by a landslide, and the movement would roll on. There is zero need to propagate the lithium conspiracy when the motive was already there without it. Add to that the fake OAS charges of irregularities in the numbers and voila – putsch. This was completely avoidable.
First of all, Morales running for a 4th term was totally legal according to Bolivian law through the 2018 Superior Electoral Court ruling lifting term limits (https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/12/bolivia-court-morales-run-fourth-term-181205052250163.html). But it’s funny how nobody ever challenged Bloomberg as being undemocratic after changing New York City’s laws to allow him to run for a 4th term, with New York City’s GDP being 40 times larger than the entire GDP of Bolivia. Why didn’t the New York Times push for a coup against Bloomberg? Does this self-rightous indignation about rulers serving 4th terms only apply to the developing world? Where was the indignation at Angela Merkel when she ran for a 4th term? (https://www.reuters.com/article/us-newyork-bloomberg/ny-council-extends-term-limit-so-bloomberg-can-run-idUSTRE49M70J20081023)
The right wing would say that the electoral court was a kangaroo court made up of Morales cronies that was not enforcing the constition. The law wasn’t changed by electoral or legislative process, but based in a flimsy application of “human rights.” When the electoral process was put before the Bolivian people to change term limits in 2016, they rejected it.
In your example, it’s not apples to apples. Bloomberg didn’t have a hand picked court circumvent the law for him. He went through a legislative process. If he hadn’t, by all means depose him. A state or federal court would have done that and the state police or FBI would have kicked him out of office.
The fact remains. If Morales would have groomed a successor, fascists would not be ruling Bolivia right now. His ego unwound his legacy. He could have been a legend. Now he’s just some scorned guy in exile.
Thank you for putting your cards on the table. You are correct. The right wing does say that. It’s also in the thoroughly debunked OAS report. The Bolivian right, backed by Mike Pompeo, Jair Bolsonaro and Ukranian fascists from Avoz has also shown over the last 7 months that it has no respect for the rule of law. The fact of the matter, as demonstrated in the CEPR report cited in the above article, is that it was the exact same Superior Electoral Court that ruled to follow the example of New York City and Germany and eliminate restrictions on a 4th term, that ruled in favor of the 2016 referendum. At which moment was this body acting as a “kangaroo court”? When it’s ruling pleased the the US State Department/Bolivian white supremacist comprador class against a 4th term in 2016, or when it overturned its own ruling in 2018?
A copy of my note/complaint to the NYT follows:
“You folks really, really need to check your stories and the bandwagons you may intentionally or otherwise be leaping aboard.
While I agree with much that appears in your press, I am deeply odismayed by your carelessness and lack of objectivity from time to time…
You are, after all, The New York Times, and must hold yourselves to the highest standards – perfection is where you should be after so many years in this game…
Peter Coombs
The real story is the bribes that the US paid to Bolivian police and military officers to betray their own country.
I doubt the probable election of Biden in the US will have any impact on the USA’s predatory practices in South America. This neoliberal monster will only stop if and when we can oust our fund manager dominated capitalism. We in the US on the left should be even more allied with the Socialist movement in Bolivia.