THE VENEZUELAN DILEMMA: PROGRESSIVES AND THE “PLAGUE ON BOTH YOUR HOUSES” POSITION
In recent weeks, a number of
Venezuelan specialists on the left side of the political spectrum have
published and posted pieces that place them in an anti- Chavista, “ni-ni”
position that consists of “a plague on both your houses” with regard to Maduro
and the Venezuelan opposition. Certainly, at this moment the
Chavistas are playing hard ball; the options available to them are limited.
I consider myself a “critical Chavista.” It’s not an easy position to be in, particularly because the last thing I would want to do is to act in any way that would favor the right (that is the Venezuelan opposition and its allies abroad). On the other hand, I have always opposed (even in my writing) the position of some people on the left who feel that U.S. leftists should not publicly express criticisms of socialist governments. Criticism (including public criticism) is necessary as it is part of the process of assimilating lessons.
The recent articles that harshly attack the Maduro government have been published in Jacobin magazine by Gabriel Hetland and another by Mike Gonzalez as well as Hetland’s piece posted by NACLA: Report on the Americas in which he uses the expression “que se vayan todos.” More recently NACLA posted an interview with Alejandro Velasco that was originally published in the magazine Nueva Sociedad.
AGREE:
Finally, there are valid criticisms of the Chavista-chosen methodology for the Constituent Assembly election to be held on July 30, but that doesn’t make Venezuela authoritarian. In 18 years of Chavista rule, there has never been plausible evidence of electoral fraud. Compare that with the dubious legitimacy of last month’s elections in the state of Mexico City, hardly unique for that nation.
The real elephant in the room is the gubernatorial election of December of this year, which the Maduro government is committed to holding. Those contests, to be held in just five months from now, will measure popular support. And they will put to the test the democratic commitment of both the government and the opposition. In my opinion the radical fringe of the opposition would prefer to reach power through force in order to crush the Chavista movement and impose neoliberal policies – “shock-treatment” style – rather than reach power through electoral means, in which case their options would be more limited.
I consider myself a “critical Chavista.” It’s not an easy position to be in, particularly because the last thing I would want to do is to act in any way that would favor the right (that is the Venezuelan opposition and its allies abroad). On the other hand, I have always opposed (even in my writing) the position of some people on the left who feel that U.S. leftists should not publicly express criticisms of socialist governments. Criticism (including public criticism) is necessary as it is part of the process of assimilating lessons.
The recent articles that harshly attack the Maduro government have been published in Jacobin magazine by Gabriel Hetland and another by Mike Gonzalez as well as Hetland’s piece posted by NACLA: Report on the Americas in which he uses the expression “que se vayan todos.” More recently NACLA posted an interview with Alejandro Velasco that was originally published in the magazine Nueva Sociedad.
I know a number of people in
Venezuela and academia in the U.S. and elsewhere who I used to see eye to eye on
with regard to Chavez and I now find them expressing total rejection of and
even animosity toward the government. The only thing that binds us now is our
common support for the need to defend Venezuelan sovereignty, and sometimes not
even that.
WHAT ARE THE ARGUMENTS OF THE
NI-NI POSITION THAT I AGREE WITH AND WHAT ARE THE ONES I DISAGREE WITH: AGREE:
1. CORRUPTION IS AN EXTREMELY
SERIOUIS PROBLEM IN VENEZUELA, which the government has not done nearly enough
to combat, though some timid measures have been taken (eg. over the last 6
months in the oil industry).
2. THE GOVERNMENT HAS VIOLATED
CERTAIN DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES – the decision to strip Henrique Capriles of the
right to participate in elections on grounds of corruption; and the delay of
the gubernatorial elections; but not the decision not to hold the recall in
2016 (since the opposition didn’t have their act together on that one).
3. THE NEGATIVE ROLE OF THE
“STATE APPARATUS AND THE CHAVISTA ELITE” - Velasco begins his interview with
these words. I agree that the state bureaucracy and Chavista elite have stifled
internal Chavista democracy and in doing so have discouraged mobilization.
Nevertheless, I also recognize that this bloc (the Chavista bureaucrats)
buttresses the Chavista hold on power as it has a mobilization and
organizational capacity that would be lost should Maduro unleash a “revolution
within the revolution.” Hastily turning power over to the rank and file would
have disastrous immediate consequences. Thus, for instance, Chavez’s decision
to implement the Plan Guayana Socialista in which the workers chose the
presidents (known as “worker presidents”) of state companies in the Guayana
region was a failure because the labor movement in those firms, almost 100
percent Chavista, went at each other’s throats.
4. THE CHAVISTA MOVEMENT HAS LOST
A LARGE NUMBER OF ITS ACTIVE SUPPORTERS. In addition to the factors named by
the “ni-nis” (corruption, government bungling, etc.) there is the factor of “desgaste”
(wearing down process over time) which is inevitable and doesn’t in itself
reflect negatively on the Chavista leadership. Eighteen years is a long time.
DISAGREE:
1. THE MADURO GOVERNMENT IS
AUTHORITARIAN OR HEADING IN AN AUTHORITARIAN DIRECTION, which at this point is
my most important disagreement with the “ni-nis.” Those who make this statement
never acknowledge the importance of context. They recognize, though in some
cases they play down (not so in the case of Hetland’s Jacobin piece), the
violent activity unleashed by the opposition, but don’t relate the state’s police
actions to the challenges it is facing. Just to provide one example. A totally
anti-government hostile communications media encourages the audacity and
extremism of the opposition for two reasons. First the police and National
Guard are held back from responding firmly and without hesitation and thus they
lose their dissuasive capacity. And second, the protesters themselves feel
empowered. Both factors play on each other. In the U.S. or any other country,
the corporate media (and some of the alternative media) would be completely
sympathetic to the actions of security forces, even their excesses, in a
situation of urban paralysis and urban violence over such an extended period of
time (it’s been three and a half months). Furthermore, to use the term
“authoritarian” when the local media is so supportive of the opposition, is
simply misleading. It is true that the national TV channels (specifically
Televen, Venevision, and Globovsion) are less hostile to the government than in
2002-2003 but they (perhaps with the exception of Venevision) are still more
pro than anti opposition. But almost all of the important written media both
nationally and locally are vocally anti-government. And in the case of the
international media, the bias has no limits.Finally, there are valid criticisms of the Chavista-chosen methodology for the Constituent Assembly election to be held on July 30, but that doesn’t make Venezuela authoritarian. In 18 years of Chavista rule, there has never been plausible evidence of electoral fraud. Compare that with the dubious legitimacy of last month’s elections in the state of Mexico City, hardly unique for that nation.
The real elephant in the room is the gubernatorial election of December of this year, which the Maduro government is committed to holding. Those contests, to be held in just five months from now, will measure popular support. And they will put to the test the democratic commitment of both the government and the opposition. In my opinion the radical fringe of the opposition would prefer to reach power through force in order to crush the Chavista movement and impose neoliberal policies – “shock-treatment” style – rather than reach power through electoral means, in which case their options would be more limited.
2. THE GOVERNMENT IS NOT SINCERE
ABOUT DIALGOUE, according to Velasco – there is no evidence one way of the
other on this one.
3. THE CHAVISTA RANK AND FILE HAS
LITTLE REASON TO ACTIVELY SUPPORT THE MADURO GOVERNMENT and for that reason two
million of them abstained in December 2015. Although obviously disillusionment
is widespread, there are many important reasons for progressives and popular
sectors to support the Maduro government: nationalistic foreign policy,
rejection of neoliberal type agreements with international financial
institutions, social programs that involve community participation;
zero-sum-game policies that favor the popular sectors (example: the Bus Rapid
Transit – BRT – that in Barcelona-Puerto La Cruz reserves one of two lanes on
the main drag connecting the two cities to accordion-type busses at the expense
of automobile traffic); and finally Maduro (in spite of all of his shortcomings
as an administrator and failure to take necessary bold decisions) has proven to
be a fighter and to convince his base that he’s not going to go down without a
struggle to the end. He has also attempted to mobilize his base; the failure to
attempt to do so by Lula and Dilma Rousseff is a major reason why the
impeachment against the latter went through.
4. VENEZUELA’S ECONOMIC
DIFFICULTIES ARE NOT ABOUT LOW OIL PRICES BUT ABOUT GOVERNMENT INEPTNESS. In
fact, there are three causes of the economic crisis and they all have
approximately the same weight: low oil prices, the economic war (with Julio
Borges’s public campaign against multinational investments in Venezuela, the
existence of an economic war is clearer to see than in the past), and erroneous
government policies. With regard to the latter (and here I probably diverge
somewhat from Mark Weisbrot), I believe that decisions on economic policies
were necessary and urgent, but that there were no easy and obvious choices and
any one that was made would have come with a price, both politically and
economically.
5. GOVERNMENT INTRANSIGENCE IS
DUE TO THE FACT THAT THE CHAVISTA LEADERS DON’T WANT TO LOSE THEIR PRIVILEGES.
This statement is misleading, even while there is undoubtedly an element of
truth in it. But the statement assumes that Chavista leaders are all cynics and
without any sense of idealism. Where is the scientific evidence to support this
claim?
6. ATTORNEY GENERAL LUISA ORTEGA DIAZ REPRESENTS A
NUETRAL POSITION WHICH THE MADURO GOVERNMENT IS UNWILLING TO TOLERATE. In fact,
regardless of her motives, she has assumed an explicitly pro-opposition
position. In such a critical situation in which the opposition openly proposes
anarchy as a means to unseat Maduro, it makes sense that the Chavistas are
attempting to remove her from office.
In short, I believe in the conclusive need to
support the Venezuelan government in spite of the numerous criticisms that I
have (some more profound than others). With that, I am not arguing for
non-discussion of the errors. Everything to the contrary, the Venezuelan
experience needs to be analyzed from a critical perspective, especially because
of the plausibility of the criticisms formulated by critical progressives and
the thorniness of many of the issues that have been raised. But there is a long
tradition of purism on the left that runs counter to the position of “critical
support” that I advocate.
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