The Obama Administration has decided to block travel by the people of Honduras to the United States to punish their country for its Supreme Court’s refusal to back the return to power of Honduras’s ex-president and would-be dictator, Manuel Zelaya, who is backed by left-wing Latin American dictators like Castro and Chavez. The Obama Administration is now blocking the issuance of nearly all visas, meaning that a Honduran grandma who wants to visit her grandkids in the United States can’t.
Obama’s decision came in response to a recent ruling by the Honduras Supreme Court, ruling that the removal of the country’s would-be dictator was a perfectly lawful “constitutional succession,” and that he must face criminal charges for the crimes he committed as president. Obama’s action will further destabilize a country whose economy has been pushed to the brink by recent turmoil, and which is the third-poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. (Honduras has close economic links to the U.S., making it very vulnerable to sanctions).
Earlier, soldiers acting on orders from the Honduras Supreme Court removed Honduras’s president from office, after he attempted to circumvent constitutional term limits, used mobs to intimidate his critics, threatened public employees with termination if they refused to help him violate the Constitution, engaged in massive corruption, illegally cut off public funds to local governments whose leaders refused to back his quest for more power, denied basic government services to his critics, refused to enforce dozens of laws passed by Congress, and spent the country into virtual bankruptcy, refusing to submit a budget so that he could illegally spend public funds on his cronies and pet projects (The ex-president made Richard Nixon look like an angel by comparison, and Americans would never put up with a president who behaved as badly as Honduras’s ex-president. But American liberals sometimes romanticize left-wing dictators overseas, and Honduras’s ex-president, despite being a wealthy landowner, knew how to curry favor among intellectuals and journalists through seductive left-wing rhetoric). The nation’s Congress then voted almost unanimously to replace him with the Congressional speaker, who is the country’s current president.
Because soldiers, “instead of the police,” carried out the court’s orders to remove the ex-president, the removal has been falsely referred to ever since as a “military coup” — by liberal journalists, the Obama Administration, the Carter Center, and the leftist regimes that now prevail in much of Latin America. Never mind that only soldiers, not police, would have enough manpower to remove a would-be dictator who was the most powerful man in his country, with his own bodyguards. Never mind that Honduran Constitution expressly vests the military — not police — with the power to enforce Constitutional guarantees like term limits, in Article 272. Or that the president forfeited his right to rule by proposing an end to term limits (Honduras has had such a problem with elected presidents later becoming “presidents for life” through vote fraud and intimidation that Article 239 of the Honduras Constitution strips presidents of the presidency if they even “propose” an end to term limits). Or that soldiers have occasionally been used to enforce court orders, even in the U.S., such as in the 1957 Little Rock desegregation order.
The ex-president’s removal was perfectly legal, say many lawyers and foreign policy experts, including attorneys Octavio Sanchez, Miguel Estrada, and Dan Miller, former Assistant Secretary of State Kim Holmes, Stanford’s William Ratliff, and the Wall Street Journal’s Mary Anastasia O’Grady.
That no “military coup” occurred in Honduras has long been clear, from the fact that it is the Honduras’s Supreme Court and Congress that continue to object on legal grounds to the ex-president’s return, while the military has said that it will not block his return if Honduras’s courts or legislature conclude that the President’s return would in fact be legal. (Indeed, the military was a big loser in the ex-president’s ouster, since the U.S. promptly cut off military aid as a result, and Honduras is heavily reliant on foreign aid)
Confronted with the legal basis for removing the ex-president under his country’s constitution, the Obama Administration has responded with a series of increasingly ridiculous rationalizations for stubbornly seeking to force his return on the Honduran people.
Obama has argued that elected presidents have a right to continue ruling even if they violate their country’s constitution, and his assistant secretary of state argued that presidents should not be removed without elaborate “judicial process” (an argument at odds with our own Constitution’s provision for legislative impeachment, and Honduras’s constitutional provision automatically stripping presidents of their office if they even propose changes to constitutional term limits).
The Obama Administration earlier showed its ignorance by suggesting that Honduran legislators and judges lost their right to hold office when Honduras’s ex-president was removed. That’s like saying that after Richard Nixon resigned in Watergate, all of his judicial appointees (including the 4 Supreme Court justices he appointed, such as Harry Blackmun and William Rehnquist) should have automatically lost their posts, and the entire Congress should have resigned. In an effort to intimidate Honduras’s legislature and courts, Obama’s State Department earlier rescinded the visas of a Honduran Supreme Court justice, the leader of Honduras’s Congress, and its human-rights ombudsman, who had criticized human-rights abuses and intimidation by the ex-president. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly justified the taking away of the visas by saying that “We don’t recognize Roberto Micheletti as the president of Honduras. We recognize Manuel Zelaya.”
But Congress and the Supreme Court are co-equal branches of government that do not lose their right to hold office merely because the president leaves his office. Presidents are not emperors. They are not the government, but merely part of it. Obama was not taught this bizarre theory of imperial power at Harvard Law School, which he and I both attended.
Obama’s demand that Honduras reinstate its would-be dictator has emboldened other elected leaders in Latin America to try to make themselves dictators. (Even the liberal Washington Post, which has not endorsed a Republican for president since 1952, admits that Obama has shown a “willful disregard of political oppression” by left-wing dictators in Latin America).
There was no “coup” in Honduras. A coup is the sudden, illegal deposition of a legitimate government by a small group. The removal of Honduras’s president was supported by the entire Honduran Supreme Court, an almost unanimous Honduran Congress, and much of Honduran society. Honduras did not lose its government, but merely replaced one illegitimate part of it: its overbearing president. And his removal from office (as opposed to his subsequent exile) was clearly legally justified.
Given the substantial Honduran population in the U.S., and the fact that Hondurans frequently travel to and from the U.S. on business or to visit family members, the Obama Administration’s restrictions on their relatives’ right to travel are a serious encroachment on civil liberties.
Unlike the Washington Post, which has largely told the disturbing truth about Honduras’s ex-president (despite being a liberal paper),the wire services have often sugarcoated the terrible record in office of Honduras’s ex-president Zelaya, and his biggest supporter, the thuggish Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez.
For example, the Associated Press’s Morgan Lee and Alexandra Olson have given Zelaya and Chavez fawning coverage, claiming that it is only Latin America’s “elites” who object to them — a blatantly false claim, given that Zelaya was so unpopular among his people that his approval rating was only 30 percent at the time of his removal. They called Chavez, who engaged in rampant vote fraud in his reelection bid (as well as censorship to silence critics and unfavorable publicity) “democratically elected.” Never mind that Chavez has shut down independent media, shot peaceful demonstrators, harassed elected mayors, and seized private property on a vast scale.
(Obama’s appointee to be the FCC’s “diversity officer” is a big fan of Venezuelan dictator Chavez, Mark Lloyd. Lloyd has called Marxist Venezuela a model, praised its authoritarian leader’s “incredible revolution” and defended his attacks on independent media. Obama’s nominee to be Assistant Secretary of State, Arturo Valenzuela, has reputation as a loud defender of Venezuelan dictator Chavez’s terrible record on freedom of the press. Obama’s green-jobs czar, Van Jones, who is busy orchestrating advertiser boycotts of Obama’s media critics, was until recently a “member of a radical communist group that was dedicated to ‘organizing a revolutionary movement in America.’”)
Ignorant of Honduran economic realities, they also make much of the fact that Honduras’s ex-president raised the minimum wage, even though many of the beneficiaries of this increase were well-off public employees whose pay is based on a large multiple of the minimum wage, and many of Honduras’s poor are not covered by minimum wage laws. Of those poor people who were covered, thousands lost their jobs when the minimum wage went up (since their employers could not afford to pay such increased wages for unskilled labor; a newspaper from the ex-president’s own Liberal Party predicted it would lead to 40,000 layoffs). By contrast, public employees in Honduras sometimes have collective bargaining agreements that set their pay as a multiple of the minimum wage, meaning that a high-paid bureaucrat may get a pay raise when the minimum wage goes up. Honduras’s ex-president also gave millions to his wealthy cronies, like the clownish buffoon Milton Jimenez.
Journalists nonsensically refer to Honduras’s removal of its ex-president as a “coup” even while admitting that it was ordered by the country’s supreme court. But if it was legal, by definition, it cannot be a coup, since a coup requires “the unconstitutional overthrow of a legitimate government by a small group.”












Honduras does not exist at the pleasure of Master of the Universe Obama. they have their own Constitution, Courts and Obama had better agree to honor their decisions or else allow for their meddling in OUR government in a well deserved turn-around.
Mr. President: BACK OFF. Who the hell do you think you are to decide what a foreign government MUST do - even if it is counter to THEIR Constitution? Your smug “I won” doesn’t count for anything abroad. Stop being the blatant bully - the “ugly American” - who would impose foreign ideals on these people.
But, of course, that means that you can’t guarantee the administration of a Communist Dictator — and to you, that must be a source of consternation. Your friends, Fidel and Manuel are on your side … but how about just letting the Hondurans govern themselves in accordance to their Constitution and Laws?
I´m hondurian. I live in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, employed of a Bank. I live of my monthly salary. Don´t have own house (I rent) and father of two kids. I want to say the world please leave us alone. Let us solve our own problems. Most of hondurians don´t want Zelaya back. We don´t understand the USA actions against our little, pour and proud country. All we want is defend our freedom against bad, corrupts leaders as Zelaya. PLease help us, don´t destroy us. Our country is not a danger to USA or any other country. God bless you all.
I´m hondurian. I live in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, employed of a Bank. I live of my monthly salary. Don´t have own house (I rent) and father of two kids. I want to say the world please leave us alone. Let us solve our own problems. Most of hondurians don´t want Zelaya back. We don´t understand the USA actions against our little, pour and proud country. All we want is defend our freedom against bad, corrupts leaders as Zelaya. PLease help us, don´t destroy us. Our country is not a danger to USA or any other country. God bless you all.
OH! You’re my new favorite blogger fyi
Miguel,
There are millions of US Citizens who support the Hondurian people and their appeal to law, constitution and freedom.
Don’t despair. We only have 3.25 years to go.
Pray for both of our nations. Pray we can avoid bloodshed.
All this situation has started with only one person and that is with no doubt Manuel Zelaya, perhaps with Hugo Chavez’s help but Mr Zelaya being honduran does not realize how much harm he has done to its people and Honduras…it is sad that therefore he is not in Honduras he is still harming its people by dividing Honduras and promoting each day violence. What now sad is…is that now Honduras is being punished by countries that were once allied. We know that many people support us, many Americans and from other countries but if it’s government do not support Honduras then we all accuse everbody else…like we say, justs will pay the sinner’s price. Honduras is now paying Zelaya’s wrongdoing and Americans will pay Obama’s wrong. So it all comes to a conclusion. Zelaya is dividing Honduras more than ever. We ask him to STOP.
Obama is an arrogant, far left socialist SOB.
God dam* Obama and God Bless Honduras.
We should give Obama a one way ticket to Honduras so he can properly check out the situation and then fly off to somewhere else other than back home.
No Jeff please…as a US Citizen and Honduran resident living in Honduras…we do not want Obama to even visit here for a moment after his actions/lack of with the Political issues of Honduras. He just needs to complete his only term as President of the US and move on….maybe to Venezuela with his buddy Hugo Chavez!
Miguel, the only people I can find so far who support Obama on this issue is his sychophant media and lackeys in government.
The PEOPLE of the USA understand what you have gone through and support you and are HORRIFIED at our President’s actions.
We can only assume he means to ‘rule’ in the same manner as Zeleya and once his own term limits come up, attempt to be voted into office as well.
The Administration has tried to justify its dubious position by citing a so-called “international consensus.”
But as another commenter put it,
“Most of the nations in the region that are demanding Zelaya’s return are either run by dictators, or run by presidents who want to rewrite their own constitutions to expand their powers — the way that Zelaya attempted to do (like Colombia’s Uribe, who wants to get rid of his own term limits, and Costa Rica’s Arias, who wants to allow relatives to succeed him and have more power than he did).
The OAS is a president’s club that has a pro-executive bent. And what happened in Honduras is that the legislature and judiciary quite legitimately don’t want their ex-president back, given his abuses of power.”
The State Department employees who came up with this erroneous legal interpretation claiming that what happened in Honduras was an illegal coup are probably the same left-wing State Department employees who applauded the harangues of Cuban spy Walter Kendall Myers.
Myers was an openly pro-Castro employee of the State Department.
Myers delivered left-wing harangues at the State Department’s headquarters in the years before he was finally discovered to be a spy for the Cuban government.
Myers’ pro-Castro sympathies only seemed to increase his popularity among the career staff at the State Department, who are mostly staunch leftists.
This statement says it all about BHO’s philosophy and political idealogy.
“Obama has argued that elected presidents have a right to continue ruling even if they violate their country’s constitution, and his assistant secretary of state argued that presidents should not be removed without elaborate “judicial process” (an argument at odds with our own Constitution’s provision for legislative impeachment, and Honduras’s constitutional provision automatically stripping presidents of their office if they even propose changes to constitutional term limits).
word association
zelaya-ignorant
chavez-hitler
obama-pathetic
castro-evil
I am a Honduran citizen, I live, work and study in Tegucigalpa Honduras, and in response to the US administration’s “punishments” this is my response:
“Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty.” -JFK