Sheinbaum and the Generals
By Ramón I. CentenoMarch 2, 2024 Z Article
Mexico now faces what Max Weber called the problem of succession, which emerges when a country has a charismatic leader. Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) is Mexicos most consequential political leader in nearly a centuryto find a president of comparable impact, one must go as far back as President Lázaro Cárdenas. AMLO, a textbook case of a charismatic leader, could have been the model for Webers reflections on the topic.
In Economy and Society, a book as thick as a block of adobe, the German sociologist dedicated key passages to the question: What happens when a charismatic leader leaves office?
Weber believed that either one of two things occur: authority is either traditionalized or rationalized, he said. That is, either a new charismatic leader is produced or charismas power is transferred to an institution. The first has yielded the Kim dynasty in North Korea, for example, whereas the latter can be seen in the Institutional Revolutionary Partys reign in twentieth century Mexico.
In Mexico, the main obstacle to the transition from one charismatic leader to another is the prohibition against presidential re-election, which is a legacy of the Mexican Revolution (19101920). The prohibition has held firm even in the face of a leader like AMLO. His charismatic leadership can last through a six-year presidential term but not a day longer.
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