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On January 22, 2002, then Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) senator Evo Morales was expelled from parliament, accused of being a "narco-terrorist". Exactly five years later, as the nation's first indigenous president, Morales gave his first annual report to parliament. This time it was not Morales who exited prematurely.
Morales began his speech by thanking those who had expelled him in 2002, particularly senator Luis Vasquez Villamor, then from the Movement of the Revolutionary Left, now representing the right-wing party Podemos. "Thanks to these people I am here today, they were my campaign managers." Angered by these comments, just minutes into Morales's speech the Podemos bench left the room.
They were not the only ones to leave upset. US ambassador Phillip Goldberg did not take kindly to Morales's demand for the legislative body to pass a bill requiring US citizens to obtain visas before entering the country, as Bolivians must do to enter the US, for reasons of "dignity, reciprocity and security".
At one point in his speech, Morales said his critics "should be worried because this little Indian won't be leaving office easily".
Outside, thousands of indigenous campesinos (peasants) and workers gathered to celebrate the day with Morales, waiting for him to deliver his report to those who had brought him to power.
A poll published in the main La Paz daily, La Razon, a year after Bolivia's powerful indigenous movement took control of parliament, showed that Morales's approval across the major cities was 59% -- higher that his historic 53.7% vote in the December 2005 elections. The rate was higher in the countryside, where Morales's main support base is.
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=52&ItemID=11990