
Large sections of Panama’s working class have been mobilising since April in nationwide strikes and protests against the José Raúl Mulino government. Teachers were the first to walk off and have maintained an indefinite national strike for more than 11 weeks.
José Cambra is an executive committee member of the Panama Teachers’ Association (ASOPROF), which has played a leading role in the strikes. He spoke to Green Left’s Ben Radford about the origins and dynamics of the ongoing national strike and the Mulino government’s heavy-handed response.
This is the first of a two-part interview.
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What sparked the most recent national strike?
On May 5, 2024, a government was elected in Panama which, unbeknown to the population at the time, is part of the global far-right Trumpist current advancing across the planet. It is a government in the style of [United States President] Donald Trump, [Argentine President] Javier Milei, [former Brazilian President] Jair Bolsonaro [and former Colombian President] Iván Duque.
Mulino did not present himself as such in the election campaign; rather, he ran as the chosen successor of former President Ricardo Martinelli, who governed about fifteen years earlier during a time of economic boom and high employment.
Martinelli faced strong resistance over attempts to open a copper mine on Indigenous territory in the Ngäbe-Buglé comarca [a legally recognised semi-autonomous Indigenous region], located in Chiriquí on the Costa Rica border. He was also challenged by banana workers in Bocas del Toro [province] when he tried to take away their right to unionise, and by residents of Colón when he attempted to evict them from the city centre.
These three episodes between 2010–13 led to the electoral defeat of Martinelli’s political project in the 2014 elections. Despite that, what lingered in public memory was that there had been jobs under Martinelli, because the two subsequent neoliberal governments failed to create any; on the contrary, unemployment rose.
Martinelli was later charged and found guilty of receiving bribes in the Odebrecht corruption scandal, which is why he could not run for president in 2024. So, he handpicked a successor: Mulino. He handed over his political capital and votes to Mulino, who won with 880,000 votes, beating the next candidate, who received 550,000. In reality, he only received 34% of the votes cast — equivalent to just 27% of the population. In other words, more than 70% of Panamanians did not vote for him.
During the presidential campaign, Mulino never outlined his position on major issues, avoided all debates and simply repeated that he would give “chen chen” — a very Panamanian term meaning he would put money in people’s pockets, that is, create jobs. He appealed to the memory of prosperity during Martinelli’s time to secure votes.
However, once in office, he laid out three main objectives. First, to deal with a longstanding issue in the social security system. Four previous neoliberal governments had blocked new contributors from entering the solidarity-based pension scheme going as far back as 2008, effectively setting the system on a path of programmed obsolescence.
Now, Mulino has introduced a law that privatises pension funds, eliminates the solidarity system and replaces it with individual accounts. Worse still, pensions will be slashed in half. Currently, retirees receive 60% of their salary; from now on, it will only be 30%. So, someone earning US$1000 a month would retire with just $300 — well below the poverty line. Moreover, Mulino has promised the oligarchy that he will hand over $9 billion from social security reserves so they can invest it — including in US debt bonds.
Forty-eight MPs voted in favour of this disastrous law; 23 voted against it. Ten of those 23 are from a new bloc of independent MPs who ran on anti-corruption platforms, chose to side with us and even presented our alternative proposals. The others aligned themselves with the system, just like the rest of the traditional parties.
Mulino’s second objective was to reopen the [First Quantum Minerals’ Cobre Panama] copper mine — a project that was defeated in 2023 following a major civilian uprising. Panama, a country of 4.2 million people, saw marches in the capital involving about a quarter of a million youth, residents and middle-class sectors who opposed the mine.
Although the mine existed for decades, Panama’s Supreme Court consistently ruled against it. In 2023, a new law attempted to legalise the mine’s operations, sparking mass protests — just before the end of President [Laurentino] Cortizo’s term and the 2024 elections. Mulino remained silent on the mine during his campaign, but once in office declared he would reopen it.
This is a mine from which 48% of [FQM’] global profits come from, yet Panama has never received a single dollar in return. The company is backed by an international alliance of Canadian, US, Korean and Chinese capital.
But what truly ignited the fire was an agreement between Trump’s administration and Mulino’s government to bring back three US military bases in Panama. This violates the historic treaty signed in 1977 between General [Omar] Torrijos and President [James] Carter, which stipulated that for 23 years there would be no US soldiers in Panama, and that the Panama Canal would return under Panamanian control.
For 25 years, Panama’s oligarchy has run the canal for its own benefit, sharing little with the people. So, when it came out that Mulino had agreed to reopen three US military bases and that there were already 1000 US troops in Panama, this was the final straw — a betrayal of everything Panamanians had fought for throughout the 20th century.
How did workers respond?
Teachers began an indefinite strike on April 23. Five days later, construction workers joined with their own indefinite strike. Their union [SUNTRACS] has been under attack since 2023, when the previous government froze their bank accounts, which hold workers’ contributions. This government has declared it will never return that money.
There is now an all-out assault on trade union freedom and the right to strike. Teachers are being dismissed, despite Article 69 of Panama’s constitution guaranteeing the right to strike. No capitalist government has wanted to abide by it, but, historically, teachers have gone on strike under this constitutional protection.
This is the first government to begin dismissing us for “abandoning our posts”. Striking teachers have gone four pay periods without salaries — their wages have been withheld. They have been placed on permanent unpaid leave and served dismissal notices accompanied by police officers.
From day one, the government has repressed us with riot police, tear gas and rubber bullets. Not a single protest has gone by without repression. The government has moved from persuasion to outright violence, but daily mobilisations persist across the nation. This is an extreme mano dura [iron fist] government.
It has imprisoned people and targeted the [SUNTRACS] leadership with false charges. The comrade who led that union, Saúl Méndez, had to seek refuge in the Bolivian embassy, because they were planning to imprison him with common criminals to have him killed — plain and simple.
In Bocas del Toro, a military siege began [in late June]. Even though the army is officially banned in Panama, there is a militarised police force: the border guards. They, along with riot police, have carried out attacks. There have been clashes, people have been killed, some disappeared, others tortured. The state of emergency in Bocas del Toro was lifted [on June 30], but the roadblocks continue. The struggle continues. They have not been defeated — but the repression is savage.
They have paraded prisoners around, flown them across the country in planes wearing nothing but underwear — Bukele-style [in reference to El Salvador’s far-right president Nayib Bukele]. We are now hearing more details from the lawyers supporting them. Tear gas was fired into Indigenous communities’ homes. The same has happened to women teachers across the country.
Unlike in 2023, when the country was practically shut down for two months, there has not yet been a full-scale social explosion with nationwide roadblocks. From October to November that year, the country was completely shut down. Indigenous communities shut down the Ngäbe-Buglé comarca in the eastern Chiriquí region. Bocas del Toro was shut down. Communities all along the Pan-American Highway blocked roads.
This time, there have been sporadic roadblocks here and there, but police have cracked down hard. The level of repression is far beyond what we saw in 2023.
In the face of this repression, how have you managed to maintain momentum?
All this is part of a broader wave of mobilisation that began in 2019, when the previous neoliberal government was elected. It came into office in May, and by September/October, there was a mass mobilisation of thousands of young women against proposed constitutional reforms and attempts to slash the public university education budget.
The pandemic interrupted that movement, but when we emerged from it, in 2022, there was another month-long teachers’ strike, with protests and roadblocks across the country. In 2023, the movement grew even stronger, with mass marches, particularly led by youth. So, we are part of a broader upsurge in popular struggle — and that is exactly what the oligarchy and the government want to crush.
But people are holding firm, because they have collective memory. Across the country, people are joining the teachers’ protests. The majority of the population supports the strike. What is helping keep the movement alive is the tradition of struggle. There is a social vanguard: the construction workers’ union in the labour sphere, and us teachers — that is precisely what [the government and oligarchy] want to destroy.
They are willing to sack 7000–10,000 teachers — the radical core of the 60,000 teachers in the country. When the strike began, probably 50% of us were taking part. In the following week, participation grew. In many areas, it was parents who kept the strike going; they met and held massive assemblies, agreeing not to send their children to school. For a time, they did not send them. But when the trimester ended, students began to return because, unfortunately, there were some teachers who stayed in class, some under threat, others as scabs.
Something important to note is that in Panama, those who retire have the right to keep working, due to a court ruling recognising that pensions are so low that people have to continue working to survive. In education, of the 60,000 teachers, probably 15,000 are over retirement age and drawing a pension.
If they lose their current salary — which they won thanks to previous strikes — they will fall below the poverty line. So, they stay and die working. But they are afraid. Some of them are still out on the streets, but others have backed off, especially because the education minister — who returned under this government — is threatening to sack them.
Does the current government maintain any support?
This strike has completely alienated civil society from the government. Among working-class communities, informal workers, Indigenous peoples, poor women, teachers, professionals, there is deep anger at the government. The latest poll shows that 86% of the population is openly opposed to the government — only 5% still support it. No government has reached such a level of rejection.
We are not calling it a fascist government, because fascist regimes such as [Adolf] Hitler in Germany or [Benito] Mussolini in Italy, have a social base of support. This is a dictatorship — a dictatorship backed by the economic oligarchy.
There are even sectors of the bourgeoisie who are now worried and looking for a way out that will not lead to a social explosion. We face a catastrophic stalemate.
Some MPs who voted for the pension law are afraid because strike workers have gone to their homes, something that in Argentina they call an escrache. These lawmakers can clearly see they are politically finished, barely a year into the government’s term.
So, some are now trying to backtrack — not to repeal the law entirely, but to modify a few articles. There are six key articles that, if you remove those, the law falls apart. We are working to bring in other social forces to pressure for changes to the law. If that happens, we would be ready to lift the indefinite strike because, right now, only teachers are still on strike.
Construction workers lost their ability to keep striking. In the past, they would walk off sites and shut down the whole country. This time they could not, because the police entered worksites; if a worker did not comply, they were forced to work or were arrested. Many construction workers chose to stay home to avoid arrest or forced labour — this reduced their capacity to mobilise.
They have gone back to work but daily protests continue. They are not on indefinite strike, which is hard to sustain, especially since their union has no money after the government froze their funds. They cannot even support their own members.
We are in the same boat. We have exhausted our resources and are now collecting food and money from the public to support the most vulnerable. The [International Labour Organisation]’s denunciations have been very important. But we must maintain pressure to get the Supreme Court to rule in favour of our legal challenges and convince the National Assembly to act. There is no negotiation with the executive. The president has said he will not negotiate. But he is not the only power in this country. There are other powers, and that is where we are applying pressure.
As teachers’ unions — grouped in the Teachers’ Action Front, which brings together the largest and most militant unions, along with smaller but highly committed ones — we launched a public campaign back in March [last year] warning people that Mulino was the greatest danger, that he was the real threat.
We supported and helped gather 167,000 signatures for a progressive, anti-oligarchy female candidate. But the key issue for us was stopping Mulino from winning, because he posed the gravest threat — as has now been proven. His is a Milei-style project: a “shock doctrine” operation to reorganise society and crush the social movements that have defended us in the streets.
[Read the full interview at links.org.au.]