The
Quiteno
multitudes
standing
in
the
pouring
rain
on
May
31,
1944,
to
hear
Velasco
promise
a
"national
resurrection,"
with
social
justice
and
due
punishment
for
the
"corrupt
Liberal
oligarchy"
that
had
been
responsible
for
"staining
the
national
honor,"
believed
that
they
were
witnessing
the
birth
of
a
popular
revolution.
Arroyo
partisans
were
promptly
jailed
or
sent
into
exile,
while
Velasco
verbally
baited
the
business
community
and
the
rest
of
the
political
right.
The
leftist
elements
within
Velasco's
Democratic
Alliance,
which
dominated
the
constituent
assembly
that
was
convened
to
write
a
new
constitution,
were
nonetheless
destined
to
be
disappointed.
In
May
1945,
after
a
year
of
growing
hostility
between
the
president
and
the
assembly,
which
was
vainly
awaiting
deeds
to
substantiate
Velasco's
rhetorical
advocacy
of
social
justice,
the
mercurial
chief
executive
condemned
and
then
repudiated
the
newly
completed
constitution.
After
dismissing
the
assembly,
Velasco
held
elections
for
a
new
assembly,
which
in
1946
drafted
a
far
more
conservative
constitution
that
met
with
the
president's
approval.
For
this
brief
period,
Conservatives
replaced
the
left
as
Velasco's
base
of
support.
Rather
than
attending
to
the
nation's
economic
problems,
Velasco
aggravated
them
by
financing
the
dubious
schemes
of
his
associates.
Inflation
continued
unabated,
as
did
its
negative
impact
on
the
national
standard
of
living,
and
by
1947
foreignexchange
reserves
had
fallen
to
dangerously
low
levels.
In
August,
when
Velasco
was
ousted
by
his
minister
of
defense,
nobody
rose
to
defend
the
man
who,
only
three
years
earlier,
had
been
hailed
as
the
nation's
savior.
During
the
following
year,
three
different
men
briefly
held
executive
power
before
Galo
Plaza
Lasso,
running
under
a
coalition
of
independent
Liberals
and
socialists,
narrowly
defeated
his
Conservative
opponent
in
presidential
elections.
His
inauguration
in
September
1948
initiated
what
was
to
become
the
longest
period
of
constitutional
rule
since
the
1912-24
heyday
of
the
Liberal
plutocracy.
Last
Updated
24th
July
2006
(DLW)
| |Source: U.S. Library of Congress||| |
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