What's new

Welcome to Offtopix 👋, Visitor

Off Topix is a well-established general discussion forum that originally opened to the public in 2009! We provide a laid-back atmosphere, and our members are down to earth. We have a ton of content, and fresh stuff is constantly being added. We cover all sorts of topics, so there's bound to be something inside to pique your interest. We welcome anyone and everyone to register and become a member of our awesome community.

Join Our Facebook Page Today!

Join the conversation and help spread the word about offtopix on Facebook! Your voice matters—let’s make an impact together!

Join Our X.com Page Today!

Join the conversation and become a champion for Offtopix on X.com! Your voice is powerful, and together, we can create meaningful change!

Join offtopix Discord Server Today!

Join the conversation and become a champion for Offtopix on Discord! Your voice holds incredible power, and together, we can create impactful change!

Musician Martelly Elected Haiti's Next President; Now What?

Jazzy

Waiting....
Valued Member
Joined
Jan 27, 2010
Posts
71,573
Reaction score
1,221
Points
2,125
Location
State Of Confusion
Website
wober.net
Musician Michel Martelly was overwhelmingly elected the next president of Haiti, according to preliminary results announced today. Martelly received 67 percent of the votes to his opponent Mirlande Manigat's 32 percent.



1301966301027.JPEG




Michel Martelly poses for a photo with supporters at a campaign rally in Gonaives, Haiti, on March 11. According to electoral officials on Monday, preliminary results show Martelly won the presidential election, defeating former first lady Mirlande Manigat.Richardson Dumel, the spokesman for the electoral council, was supposed to announce the results, but he called in sick, saying he needed rest.



It was a tense election period, marked by notable fraud in the first round followed by violent protests, and the deep, angry malaise of homelessness and a slow recovery from the Jan. 12, 2010, earthquake.



Martelly was the candidate of change. The well-loved carnival singer won decisively based mostly on his outsider status, folksy grassroots rhetoric and a sophisticated campaign run by foreign consultants.



Voters in Haiti sported pink plastic bracelets, in the style of the Livestrong campaign, which first popularized them. Martelly courted donations and support from the large Haitian diaspora and took to the airwaves on live Facebook chats.



In Haiti, his message resonated with bored, unemployed, disaffected youth who flocked to hear Martelly's straight talk. Manigat, a 70-year-old professor and graduate of the Sorbonne, held the lead after the first round of votes, but in the second round struggled to connect with some voters.



In an interview with AOL News on Election Day two weeks ago, Manigat acknowledged, People see me in a certain way. People that know me say I'm always smiling. But now [critics] say I seem aloof, intellectual. I didn't speak the grassroots Creole.



From her campaign, she said she learned patience, understanding. She was often challenged at public events by Martelly's supporters, who jeered her and shouted Martelly's slogan, Tet kale! like a battle cry.



The last meeting I had in Mirebalais, when Martelly's people disturbed it, and I went out, I was not angry, she said. I was preoccupied. I had a deep preoccupation. ... There was a crescendo in the way violence has been used.



International monitors noted a diminution of violence and fraud during the second round of votes, though cities such as the coastal town of Jacmel faced numerous days of roadblocks after the mayor endorsed Martelly.



Manigat's supporters painted Martelly as an immoral, vagabond candidate, but that only seemed to help him. Young people, especially, said they were fed up with the status quo, the political elite and Manigat's coterie of longtime political insiders like the senator, Youri Latortue.



The earthquake marked a sea change in Haiti's political expectations. Faced with miles of rubble and hundreds of thousands of people still homeless from the quake, voters felt their last best hope was a wild-card candidate.



Though Martelly's style was bold, his campaign promises were typical for Haiti. He spoke frequently about the need for improved agriculture, education and job creation.



He also promised a solution to the complex land-titling system, which locked many of the earthquake-displaced into a vicious cycle of poverty, either squatting on dangerous land or paying exorbitant rental fees to fake or unscrupulous owners.



Martelly's 67 percent of the vote is nearly unprecedented in Haiti and a clear mandate for his leadership, assuming the tabulation holds up in the final announcement April 16.



Now Haiti wants to know, what can you do for me?



Rest of article: http://www.aolnews.com/2011/04/04/musician-michel-martelly-elected-haitis-next-president-now-wha/
 

Create an account or login to post a reply

You must be a member in order to post a reply

Create an account

Create an account here on Off Topix. It's quick & easy!

Log in

Already have an account? Log in here.

Welcome to Offtopix 👋, Visitor

Off Topix is a well-established general discussion forum that originally opened to the public in 2009! We provide a laid-back atmosphere, and our members are down to earth. We have a ton of content, and fresh stuff is constantly being added. We cover all sorts of topics, so there's bound to be something inside to pique your interest. We welcome anyone and everyone to register and become a member of our awesome community.

Theme customization system

You can customize some areas of the forum theme from this menu.

  • Theme customizations unavailable!

    Theme customization fields are not available to you, please contact the administrator for more information.

  • Choose the color combination that reflects your taste
    Background images
    Color gradient backgrounds
Back