Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
03SANTODOMINGO7132
2003-12-08 20:52:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Santo Domingo
Cable title:  

DOMINICAN ELECTIONS #6: PRD'S RUMP: HATUEY,

Tags:  DR PGOV 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SANTO DOMINGO 007132 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

STATE FOR WHA AND DRL
NSC FOR SHANNON AND MADISON
LABOR FOR ILAB
TREASURY FOR OASIA-LAMONICA
USDOC FOR 4322/ITA/MAC/WH/CARIBBEAN BASIN DIVISION
USDOC FOR 3134/ITA/USFCS/RD/WH

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: DR PGOV
SUBJECT: DOMINICAN ELECTIONS #6: PRD'S RUMP: HATUEY,
HATUEY, HE'S OUR MAN

REF: SANTO DOMINGO 5759

UNCLAS SANTO DOMINGO 007132

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

STATE FOR WHA AND DRL
NSC FOR SHANNON AND MADISON
LABOR FOR ILAB
TREASURY FOR OASIA-LAMONICA
USDOC FOR 4322/ITA/MAC/WH/CARIBBEAN BASIN DIVISION
USDOC FOR 3134/ITA/USFCS/RD/WH

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: DR PGOV
SUBJECT: DOMINICAN ELECTIONS #6: PRD'S RUMP: HATUEY,
HATUEY, HE'S OUR MAN

REF: SANTO DOMINGO 5759


1. (SBU) Following is the sixth in Embassy Santo Domingo's
presidential election series:

PRD'S RUMP: HATUEY, HATUEY, HE'S OUR MAN

Party President Hatuey De Camps was the winner of the rump
nationwide primary election on December 7 organized by his
dissident faction of the ruling Dominican Revolutionary Party
(PRD). De Camps and two other "anti-re-electionistas" ran in
a field of three candidates. They had refused to participate
in the PRD primary scheduled for December 14 in which
President Mejia will compete for the nomination against three
other pre-candidates. The De Camps group vow fidelity to
their version of the PRD's traditional opposition to
presidential re-election.

The December 7 primary result gives the opinion of a minority
-- about 19 percent -- of the PRD's estimated 1.6 million
members and an even smaller slice of the electorate. With 72
percent of the 3000 voting sites reporting, De Camps won 64
percent of 302,000 votes counted and Senator Ramon
Alburquerque and Jose Rafael Abinader each won 18 percent.
According to the press, some PRD headquarters remained closed
for the primary, and in those areas the dissidents had to set
up polls at personal residences or on the street. Some of
the sites attracted few voters. Tropical storm Odette dumped
heavy rain on the island the night before the vote.

The real PRD event will be the December 14 primary.
President Mejia faces three challengers -- Vice President
Milagros Ortiz-Bosch, Secretary of State for Tourism Rafael
"Fello" Subervi, and former PRD president Enmanuel Esquea --
who have agreed to pool their votes behind the highest
vote-getter of the three. Mejia is still the best bet.

Candidates registered for the December 14 primary have
petitioned the the National Elections Board (JCE) to set
aside the decision of the PRD National Executive Committee
under Hatuey's chairmanship authorizing the December 7 poll.
Party statutes give De Camps, as party president, authority
to call primary elections, and only a very close legal
interpretation by the JCE could set it aside. (The JCE ruled
on December 5 on a factional dispute within the opposition
PRSC, disallowing actions by both groups but favoring the
party's president and presidential candidate against
challengers who claim to have more rank-and-file support.)

The protracted nomination struggle within the PRD has
consumed its leaders' energies and left former President
(1996-2000) Leonel Fernandez of the opposition PLD sitting in
the catbird seat. The PRD must recover from its multiple
splits in the next few weeks to have any chance of offsetting
popular discontent with Mejia by challenging Fernandez's
record and creating a credible alternative to the "once and
future" president.


2. (U) Draft: Bainbridge Cowell.
KUBISKE