THE NEW YORK TIMES’ UNCANNY COMPARISON OF LEOPOLDO LOPEZ WITH MARTIN LUTHER KING
The corporate media
reached an all-time low this week in its one-sided reporting on Venezuela. Wil H. Hylton in a lengthy article in New York Times' magazine section
compared jailed opposition leader Leopoldo López with Martin Luther King.
Throughout the article, Hylton weaves together the topic of King's employment
of civil disobedience in the struggle to achieve equality for African-Americans
and the protests promoted by López in 2014 known as the "guarimba."
The comparison has to be seen as part of an ongoing effort promoted by
international actors including the Trump administration to demonstrate that the
Maduro government is a dictatorship, or a dictatorship in the making. The
comparison falls short for a number of reasons.
In the first place, the
four-month "guarimba" in 2014 and again in 2017 had as its principal
objective the achievement of regime change. This goal was embraced by the protesters
in spite of the fact that the opposition parties (including López's Voluntad
Popular party), which would have assumed power had the guarimba been successful,
are highly unpopular – they are certainly not any more popular than the
Chavista movement. Unlike King's civil rights movement with its well-defined concrete
objectives, Lopez's guarimba protest was an insurrectional movement. López
publicly declared that the guarimba would continue until the Maduro government
was ousted.
In the second place,
the tactics employed by the “guarimberos” stood in sharp contrast with King's
commitment to pacifism. Most important, there was no clear, well-defined
separation between the "peaceful" guarimberos who built barricades
consisting of boulders, trees and fires and placed oily substances on sidewalks
resulting in numerous casualties of motorcyclists, on the one hand, and the
violent guarimberos responsible for the death of six National Guardsmen in 2014
and the guarimberos of 2017 with their para-military appearance, on the other
hand.
In the third place,
opposition leaders supported the violent guarimberos in concrete ways. One of
the opposition's main slogans "freedom for the political prisoners"
made no distinction between those who had engaged in violence and those who
didn't. In 2017, Freddy Guevara, Voluntad Popular’s maximum leader in the
National Assembly, met with and gave counseling to the hooded guarimberos who
engaged in confrontational and at times violent tactics. By conveniently passing
over these facts, Hylton is able to deny any tie-in between the “peaceful” and
non-peaceful protests.
In the fourth place,
the expressions of intolerance and even hatred also contrasts with everything
that King stood for. Just one example was the incidents of the capturing of
Chavistas and policemen to humiliate or inflict harm on them. Gurimberos in 2017
set fire to Chavista Oscar Figueroa resulting in his death. Hylton makes no
mention of these incidents in his cherry-picking article.
Hylton’s article is
replete with other deceptive statements and omissions. Just one will suffice.
Hylton discusses López’s family lineage dating back to Simón Bolívar and
Cristóbal Mendoza, the nation’s first president. But no mention is made of the
fact that his grandfather was the brother and close business associate of Eugenio
Mendoza, the Rockefeller of Venezuela for many decades. While Hylton recognizes
López’s wealthy background, the fact that he was born into the richest family
in the nation would detract from the author’s narrative of López as a champion
of the poor. Are these omissions coincidental or are they part of an attempt to
paint a glorified image of López even at the expense of basic journalistic
principles?
By publishing the
article the Times is not only
sacrificing journalistic principles. It is helping to place on center stage an
opposition radical who is well positioned to lead any movement that succeeds in
removing Maduro from office. Opposition radicalism in the Venezuelan context is
synonymous with the playbook that ousted Chávez on April 11, 2002, dissolved
the nation’s main democratic institutions, delayed presidential elections for
up to one year, hunted down Chavista leaders, and initiated bloody repressive
actions against the popular movement. López, as mayor of Chacao (one of Caracas’
municipalities), played an active role in these events, a fact completely
ignored by Hylton. The April 2002 strategy of effectuating a radical break with
the Chavista past implied the implementation of neoliberal formulas,
shock-treatment style.
Hylton makes the
dubious claim that in the U.S. political setting López “would probably land in
the progressive wing of the Democratic Party.” In fact, the radical brand that
López is identified with once in power will translate itself into witch-hunts
of Chavistas at all levels under the slogan of "no to impunity," as
well as purges of the armed forces, the state oil company and the state in
general. The repression of the Chavistas will open the way for tough, unpopular
neoliberal measures. The electoral road to power precludes such sweeping
changes, thus explaining the policy of electoral abstention favored by the
radicals on the right including López. The New
York Times, by glorifying leaders of the ilk of López, is demonstrating
that the support of the U.S. liberal establishment for popular pro- working class
reforms on the nation's domestic front does not extend to third-world
countries.
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