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Venezuelan Referendum: A Post-Mortem and its Aftermath
by James Petras
Venezuelas constitutional reforms supporting President Chavezs socialist project were defeated by the narrowest of margins: 1.4% of 9 million voters. The result however was severely compromised by the fact that 45% of the electorate abstained, meaning that only 28% of the electorate voted against the progressive changes proposed by President Chavez.
While the vote was a blow to Venezuelas attempt to extricate itself from oil dependence and capitalist control over strategic financial and productive sectors, it does no change the 80% majority in the legislature nor does it weaken the prerogatives of the Executive branch.
Nevertheless, the Rights marginal win does provide a semblance of power, influence and momentum to their efforts to derail President Chavez socio-economic reforms and to oust his government and/or force him to reconcile with the old elite power brokers.
Internal deliberations and debates have already begun
within the Chavista movement and among the disparate oppositional
groups. One fact certain to be subject to debate is why the over 3
million voters who cast their ballots for Chavez in the 2006 election
(where he won 63% of the vote) did not vote in the referendum. The
Right only increased their voters by 300,000 votes; even assuming that
these votes were from disgruntled Chavez voters and not from activated
right-wing middle class voters that leaves out over 2.7 million Chavez
voters who abstained.
Whenever the issue of a socialist transformation is put at the top of a
governmental agenda, as Chavez did in these constitutional changes, all
the forces of right-wing reaction and their (progressive) middle
class followers unite forces and forget their usual partisan
bickering. Chavez popular supporters and organizers faced a vast
array of adversaries each with powerful levers of power.
They
included:
- 1) numerous agencies of the US government (CIA, AID, NED and
the Embassys political officers), their subcontracted assets (NGOs,
student recruitment and indoctrinations programs, newspaper editors and
mass media advertisers), the US multi-nationals and the Chamber of
Commerce (paying for anti-referendum ads, propaganda and street
action);
- 2) the major Venezuelan business associations FEDECAMARAS,
Chambers of Commerce and wholesale/retailers who poured millions of
dollars into the campaign, encouraged capital flight and promoted
hoarding, black market activity to bring about shortages of basic
food-stuffs in popular retail markets;
- 3) over 90% of the private mass
media engaged in a non-stop virulent propaganda campaign made up of the
most blatant lies including stories that the government would seize
children from their families and confine them to state-controlled
schools (the US mass media repeated the most scandalous vicious lies
without any exceptions);
- 4) The entire Catholic hierarchy from the
Cardinals to the local parish priests used their bully platforms and
homilies to propagandize against the constitutional reforms more
important, several bishops turned over their churches as organizing
centers to violent far right-wing resulting, in one case, in the
killing of a pro-Chavez oil worker who defied their street
barricades. The leaders of the counter-reform quartet were able to
buy-out and attract small sectors of the liberal wing of the Chavez
Congressional delegation and a couple of Governors and mayors, as well
as several ex-leftists (some of whom were committed guerrillas 40 years
ago), ex-Maoists from the Red Flag group and several Trotskyists
trade union leaders and sects. A substantial number of social
democratic academics (Edgar Lander, Heinz Dietrich) found paltry
excuses for opposing the egalitarian reforms, providing an intellectual
gloss to the rabid elite propaganda about Chavez dictatorial or
Bonapartist tendencies.
This disparate coalition
headed by the Venezuelan elite and the US government relied basically
on pounding the same general message: The re-election amendment, the
power to temporarily suspend certain constitutional provisions in times
of national emergency (like the military coup and lockouts of 2002 to
2003), the executive nomination of regional administrators and the
transition to democratic socialism were part of a plot to impost Cuban
communism.
Right-wing and liberal propagandists turned unlimited
re-election reform (a parliamentary practice throughout the world) into
a power grab by an authoritarian/totalitarian/power-hungry
tyrant according to all Venezuelan private media and their US
counterparts at CBC, NBC, ABC, NPR, New York and Los Angeles Times,
Washington Post.
The amendment granting the President emergency powers
was de-contextualized from the actual US-backed civilian elite-military
coup and lockout of 2002-2003, the elite recruitment and infiltration
of scores of Colombian paramilitary death squads (2005), the kidnapping
of a Venezuelan-Colombian citizen by Colombian secret police (2004) in
the center of Caracas and open calls for a military coup by the
ex-Defense Minister Baduel.
Each sector of the
right-wing led counter-reform coalition focused on distinct and
overlapping groups with different appeals. The US focused on
recruiting and training student street fighters channeling hundreds of
thousands of dollars via AID and NED for training in civil society
organization and conflict resolution (a touch of dark humor?) in the
same fashion as the Yugoslav/Ukrainian/Georgian experiences.
The US
also spread funds to their long-term clients the nearly defunct
social democratic trade union confederation the CTV, the mass media
and other elite allies. FEDECAMARAS focused on the small and big
business sectors, well-paid professionals and middle class consumers.
The right-wing students were the detonators of street violence and
confronted left-wing students on and off the campuses.
The mass media
and the Catholic Church engaged in fear mongering to the mass
audience. The social democratic academics preached NO or abstention
to their progressive colleagues and leftist students. The Trotskyists
split up sectors of the trade unions with their pseudo-Marxist chatter
about Chavez the Bonapartist with his capitalist and imperialist
proclivities, incited US trained students and shared the NO platform
with CIA funded CTV trade union bosses. Such were the unholy alliances
in the run-up to the vote.
In the post-election
period this unstable coalition exhibited internal differences. The
center-right led by Zulia Governor Rosales calls for a new encounter
and dialogue with the moderate Chavista ministers. The hard right
embodied in ex-General Baduel (darling of sectors of the pseudo-left)
demands pushing their advantage further toward ousting President-elect
Chavez and the Congress because he claimed they still have the power
to legislate reforms! Such, such are our democrats! The leftists
sects will go back to citing the texts of Lenin and Trotsky (rolling
over in their graves), organizing strikes for wage increases
in the new
context of rising right-wing power to which they contributed.
Campaign and Structural Weakness of the Constitutional Reformers
The Right-wing was able to gain their slim majority because of serious
errors in the Chavista electoral campaign as well as deep structural
weaknesses.
Referendum Campaign:
- 1) The referendum
campaign suffered several flaws. President Chavez, the leader of the
constitutional reform movement was out of the country for several weeks
in the last two months of the campaign in Chile, Bolivia, Colombia,
France, Saudi Arabia, Spain and Iran) depriving the campaign of its
most dynamic spokesperson.
- 2) President Chavez got drawn into issues
which had no relevance to his mass supporters and may have provided
ammunition to the Right. His attempt to mediate in the Colombian
prisoner-exchange absorbed an enormous amount of wasted time and led,
predictably, nowhere, as Colombias death squad President Uribe
abruptly ended his mediation with provocative insults and calumnies,
leading to a serious diplomatic rupture. Likewise, during the
Ibero-American summit and its aftermath, Chavez engaged in verbal
exchange with Spains tin-horn monarch, distracting him from facing
domestic problems like inflation and elite-instigated hoarding of basic
food stuffs.
Many Chavista activists failed to
elaborate and explain the proposed positive effects of the reforms, or
carry house-to-house discussions countering the monstrous propaganda
(stealing children from their mothers) propagated by parish priests
and the mass media. They too facilely assumed that the fear-mongering
lies were self-evident and all that was needed was to denounce them.
Worst of all, several Chavista leaders failed to organize any support
because they opposed the amendments, which strengthened local councils
at the expense of majors and governors.
The campaign
failed to intervene and demand equal time and space in all the private
media in order to create a level playing field. Too much emphasis was
placed on mass demonstrations downtown and not on short-term impact
programs in the poor neighborhoods solving immediate problems, like
the disappearance of milk from store shelves, which irritated their
natural supporters.
Structural weaknesses
There
were two basic problems which deeply influenced the electoral
abstention of the Chavez mass supporters: The prolonged scarcity of
basic foodstuffs and household necessities, and the rampant and
seemingly uncontrolled inflation (18%) during the latter half of 2007
which was neither ameliorated nor compensated by wage and salary
increases especially among the 40% of self-employed workers in the
informal sector.
Basic foodstuffs like powdered
milk, meat, sugar, beans and many other items disappeared from both the
private and even the public stores. Agro-businessmen refused to
produce and the retail bosses refused to sell because state price
controls (designed to control inflation) lessened their exorbitant
profits. Unwilling to intervene the Government purchased and
imported hundreds of millions of dollars of foodstuffs much of which
did not reach popular consumers, at least not at fixed prices.
Partially because of lower profits and in large part as a key element
in the anti-reform campaign, wholesalers and retailers either hoarded
or sold a substantial part of the imports to black marketers, or
channeled it to upper income supermarkets.
Inflation was a
result of the rising incomes of all classes and the resultant higher
demand for goods and services in the context of a massive drop in
productivity, investment and production. The capitalist class engaged
in disinvestment, capital flight, luxury imports and speculation in the
intermediate bond and real estate market (some of whom were justly
burned by the recent collapse of the Miami real estate bubble).
The Governments half-way measures of state intervention and radical
rhetoric were strong enough to provoke big business resistance and more
capital flight, while being too weak to develop alternative productive
and distributive institutions. In other words, the burgeoning crises
of inflation, scarcities and capital flight, put into question the
existing Bolivarian practice of a mixed economy, based on
public-private partnership financing an extensive social welfare
state.
Big Capital has acted first economically by boycotting and
breaking its implicit social pact with the Chavez Government.
Implicit in the social pact was a trade off: Big Profits and high
rates of investment to increase employment and popular consumption.
With powerful backing and intervention from its US partners, Venezuelan
big business has moved politically to take advantage of the popular
discontent to derail the proposed constitutional reforms. Its next
step is to reverse the halting momentum of socio-economic reform by a
combination of pacts with social democratic ministers in the Chavez
Cabinet and threats of a new offensive, deepening the economic crisis
and playing for a coup.
Policy Alternatives
The
Chavez Government absolutely has to move immediately to rectify some
basic domestic and local problems, which led to discontent, and
abstention and is undermining its mass base. For example, poor
neighborhoods inundated by floods and mudslides are still without homes
after 2 years of broken promises and totally inept government agencies.
The Government, under popular control, must immediately and directly
intervene in taking control of the entire food distribution program,
enlisting dock, transport and retail workers, neighborhood councils to
insure imported food fills the shelves and not the big pockets of
counter-reform wholesalers, big retail owners and small-scale black
marketers. What the Government has failed to secure from big farmers
and cattle barons in the way of production of food, it must secure via
large-scale expropriation, investment and co-ops to overcome business
production and supply strikes. Voluntary compliance has been
demonstrated NOT TO WORK. Mixed economy dogma, which appeals to
rational economic calculus, does not work when high stake political
interests are in play.
To finance structural changes
in production and distribution, the Government is obligated to control
and take over the private banks deeply implicated in laundering money,
facilitating capital flight and encouraging speculative investments
instead of production of essential goods for the domestic market.
The Constitutional reforms were a step toward providing a legal
framework for structural reform, at least of moving beyond a capitalist
controlled mixed economy. The excess legalism of the Chavez
Government in pursuing a new referendum underestimated the existing
legal basis for structural reforms available to the government to deal
with the burgeoning demands of the two-thirds of the population, which
elected Chavez in 2006.
In the post-referendum
period the internal debate within the Chavez movement is deepening.
The mass base of poor workers, trade unionists and public employees
demand pay increases to keep up with inflation, an end to the rising
prices and scarcities of commodities.
They abstained for lack of
effective government action not because of rightist or liberal
propaganda. They are not rightists or socialist but can become
supportive of socialists if they solve the triple scourge of scarcity,
inflation and declining purchasing power.
Inflation
is a particular nemesis to the poorest workers largely in the informal
sector because their income is neither indexed to inflation as is the
case for unionized workers in the formal sector nor can they easily
raise their income through collective bargaining as most of them are
not tied to any contract with buyers or employers. As a result in
Venezuela (as elsewhere) price inflation is the worst disaster for the
poor and the reason for the greatest discontent. Regimes, even
rightist and neo-liberal ones, which stabilize prices or sharply reduce
inflation usually secure at least temporary support from the popular
classes. Nevertheless anti-inflationary policies have rarely played a
role in leftist politics (much to their grief) and Venezuela is no
exception.
At the cabinet, party and social
movement leadership level there are many positions but they can be
simplified into two polar opposites. On the one side, the
pro-referendum dominant position put forth by the finance, economy and
planning ministries seek cooperation with private foreign and domestic
investors, bankers and agro-businessmen, to increase production,
investment and living standards of the poor. They rely on appeals to
voluntary co-operation, guarantees to property ownership, tax rebates,
access to foreign exchange on favorable terms and other incentives plus
some controls on capital flight and prices but not on profits.
The
pro-socialist sector argues that this policy of partnership has not
worked and is the source of the current political impasse and social
problems. Within this sector some propose a greater role for state
ownership and control, in order to direct investments and increase
production and to break the boycott and stranglehold on distribution.
Another group argues for worker self-management councils to organize
the economy and push for a new revolutionary state. A third group
argues for a mixed state with public and self-managed ownership, rural
co-operatives and middle and small-scale private ownership in a highly
regulated market.
The future ascendance of the mixed
economy group may lead to agreements with the soft liberal opposition
but failing to deal with scarcities and inflation will only
exacerbate the current crisis. The ascendance of the more radical
groups will depend on the end of their fragmentation and sectarianism
and their ability to fashion a joint program with the most popular
political leader in the country, President Hugo Chavez.
The referendum and its outcome (while important today) is merely an
episode in the struggle between authoritarian imperial centered
capitalism and democratic workers centered socialism.
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