CENTER-LEFT CONVERGENCE IN VENEZUELA: A BLOW TO U.S. INTERVENTION
Jacobin,
October 27, 2020
by Steve Ellner
Like other Venezuelan centrists, Claudio Fermín – a protege
of neoliberal president Carlos Andrés Pérez in the early 1990s – has changed
course and now vehemently opposes both US interventionism and his nation’s
radical right. His changes show just how much Venezuelan politics have been
transformed over the recent past. Since the attempted coup of April 2002, leftist
governments have been pitted against a united opposition intent on achieving
regime change by any means possible. But now such extreme polarization seems to
be weakening.
A former mayor of Caracas and presidential candidate, Fermín
is not alone among centrist politicians in bucking the Trump administration,
which insists on a boycott of the upcoming National Assembly elections for the
purpose of further isolating president Nicolás Maduro.
Fermín’s nationalistic rhetoric was on display in a recent
interview in which he lashed out at both the Venezuelan right and the Trump
administration and other governments that have followed its lead: “The superpowers
have buddied up with the nation's anti-Venezuelan political elite, who don’t
really have Venezuela in their hearts, who impede the arrival of oil tankers
with much needed gasoline… The sanctions are a negation of national sovereignty.”
Washington’s implementation of international sanctions — opposed by dissidents
within opposition ranks —has greatly contributed to this shake-up of Venezuelan
politics.
Even in recent years, the opposition had been united. In the 2015
elections for the National Assembly, it achieved an all-encompassing unity, supporting
a single anti-government ticket that emerged victorious. Then, in January 2019,
the entire opposition went along with Juan Guaidó’s self-proclamation as
president. But now the centrists, who for the most part recognize the
legitimacy of the nation’s political system, are faced off against politicians
on the Right who are calling for abstention in the National Assembly elections slated
for December 6.
The convergence between center and left is not only the result of
Washington's policies and the untold suffering they have inflicted on the
Venezuelan people. It is also the product of president Nicolás Maduro's adroit
strategy of accepting some of the demands of the centrists while pursuing a
hardline approach against the insurgent opposition. Carlos Ron, vice-minister
for North America, told me “Maduro has to be recognized for achieving
what appeared impossible: moving a big chunk of the opposition from insurgency
to peace.”
But the strategy has downsides.
Concessions to business interests, which go hand in hand with Maduro's
conciliatory strategy, have been criticized by a left faction of the governing
Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela (PSUV). In addition, the Communist Party
and several other parties and groups belonging to the ruling Polo Patriótico alliance
have broken with Maduro and formed a rival slate for the upcoming elections.
And despite their recent stands, it is
clear that the centrists are far from stable allies for Maduro. Some are just biding
their time — waiting for the right moment to attempt to force him out through a
recall election.
Stiffening the Sanctions
As the
Trump administration rachets up the sanctions and threats of military action,
Venezuelans increasingly reject them. The public opinion firm Hinterlaces released a poll in November 2017 indicating that 72
percent of Venezuelans oppose the sanctions, and another in August
2020 showing that the figure had increased to
81 percent. According to this latter
survey, 80 percent of Venezuelans say that the “role of the United States has
been negative.”
Trump’s
stiffening of the sanctions in the age of COVID-19 is a premier example of what
Naomi Klein calls the “Shock Doctrine”: situations of crisis and suffering provide
the powerful with unique opportunities to impose
dramatic changes.
In the midst
of the coronavirus, the Trump administration has ordered four oil service
companies to close operations in Venezuela. It is also rescinding similar
special “permissions” that had been granted to Spain’s Repsol, Italy’s ENI, and
India’s Reliance Industries to engage in swap arrangements involving oil, as
long as no cash was involved. The termination of these barter deals will
deprive Venezuela of diesel fuel used to transport food and generate
electricity.
The sanctions
against individual Venezuelans have also taken a disturbing turn in recent
months. Previously, the targets were Venezuelan politicians, bureaucrats and
others associated with the government who were accused of engaging in illicit acts,
such as corruption, repression and drug trafficking. But now, in 2020, even political centrists are in the crosshairs
of the Trump administration, because of their
insufficient enthusiasm for Guaidó.
In January,
the Department of the Treasury sanctioned seven dissident members of the
opposition’s main political parties – Acción Democrática (AD), COPEI, Primero
Justicia and Voluntad Popular – who had begun to question their organizations’ unconditional
support for Guaidó and opposition to electoral participation. The Trump
administration took at face value the word of pro-Guaidó leaders that the
dissidents were engaged in corrupt dealings involving a government food
distribution program. In fact, the sanctions were politically motivated, as
revealed by James Story, US ambassador to Venezuela, when he warned “those who undermine Venezuelan democracy will be sanctioned.”
In September,
Steven Mnuchin and the Treasury Department made it even clearer that the
sanctions were all about politics. The heads of five break-off parties
including AD’s Bernabé Gutiérrez, a well-respected long-time party leader, were
placed on the sanction list. In doing so, Treasury accused these “key
figures” of carrying out a plan “to place the
opposition parties in the lap of politicians affiliated with the regime of Nicolas
Maduro”
In adopting punitive
measures, the Trump administration is taking sides in an internal party matter of
tactics. Indeed, the dispute within different parties of the opposition,
particularly AD and Primera Justicia, over electoral participation versus
abstention dates back many years. Gutiérrez questioned his party’s refusal to run
candidates in the National Assembly elections of 2005, when Claudio Fermín was
expelled from AD for advocating participation.
How
Marginal are the Centrists?
Parties on
both sides of the political spectrum have split in the leadup to the December elections.
In the case of AD, COPEI, Primero Justicia and Voluntad Popular, the
PSUV-dominated Supreme Tribunal of Justice has recognized the legality of the parties
participating in the electoral contest, and not the abstentionist ones.
The Trump
administration has labeled the non-abstentionistists “marginal
politicians.” If the presidential elections of
2018 are any indication, abstention will be just slightly over 50 per cent. Naturally,
that does not mean that all those who abstain are thereby supporting Guaidó and
his allies.
Much is at
stake in the battle between the abstentionists and non-abstentionists. The
emergence of a bloc of non-leftist parties that either explicitly or tacitly
recognize the legitimacy of Venezuela’s political system could pave the way for
a new era in the country's politics devoid of the internecine warfare of the
past. Furthermore, it is a clear demonstration of the bankruptcy of the Trump
administration’s regime change efforts. And it puts the lie to the claim of
both Democratic and Republican leaders that Maduro is nothing less than a
dictator.
Fermín argues
that opposition party militants are at cross purposes with their leaders. “Thousands of activists have been denied the possibility of running
for city council or for mayor. Abstentionism has castrated a whole generation
of activists since 2005.”
Gutíerrez claims
that in January AD’s state-level secretary-generals held rank-and-file
assemblies at the local level and “everyone expressed support for electoral participation.”
Subsequently, however, national secretary-general Henry Ramos imposed his will on
the party in favor of abstentionism.
Fermín and Gutiérrez
may be overly optimistic regarding their projections for the turnout on December
6. The nation's harsh economic conditions, in contrast to its previous status
as a privileged, oil-producing nation, influence many Venezuelans to doubt the legitimacy
of the existing system. Furthermore, the sway of opposition parties that favor
abstention cannot be overestimated.
Not only AD but
also two-time presidential candidate Henrique Capriles of Primero Justicia had
been open to electoral participation early this year but then swung over to the
abstentionist camp. Undoubtedly pressure from abroad including fear of US
sanctions does much to explain their reconsideration.
Indeed, the
international setting is a key variable. Most of the governments in the
Americas and Europe are in the hands of right-wing and conservative parties and
have played an activist role in favor of Venezuelan regime change. The
Venezuelan centrists hoped for backing from Europe, particularly Spain's
moderate government which at one point sent out mixed signals. But much to the disappointment
of the centrists, in September the European Union rejected Maduro’s invitation for
it to provide
electoral observers in December,
Maduro's Gambit
The Maduro
government and the centrists have supported each other in concrete ways. In
January, the centrists requested and received legal recognition from the
Supreme Tribunal of Justice for the National Assembly they controlled, as
opposed to a parallel body controlled by Guaidó's followers. Then the same
court recognized the centrist-controlled parties which had split off from
the ones headed by traditional opposition leaders. In turn, the centrists have
explicitly or tacitly rejected the Right's characterization of the Maduro government
as a narco-terrorist dictatorship.
Indeed, the
centrists' willingness to defy international and domestic pressure is
predicated on three assertions: first, the Maduro government is not a narco-state,
second, it is not a dictatorship and third, it has over the recent past adopted
business-friendly policies.
If convincing
evidence were to disprove any of these statements, the strategy followed by the
centrists would be untenable.
Maduro’s pro-business
reforms were welcomed by centrists — but brought criticism from some on the Left
including close supporters. The latest example of the government’s opening to
the private sector is the recently passed "Anti-Blockade Law" which
would allow the executive to enter into secret agreements with private capital
over new property arrangements – possibly containing “clauses to protect investment in order to generate confidence and
stability.”
The Communist
Party slammed the arrangement as a reversal of Hugo Chávez’s policies in favor
of national independence and an attempt to legalize a “policy of subordination to the interests of capital.”
Fermín was more
receptive to the proposal and praised Maduro for not expropriating a single
company, which he claimed amounted to a “self-criticism” with regard to the policies of his predecessor.
The second
assertion – which debunks the narco-state thesis – denies the existence of the
drug-trafficking "Cartel de los Soles," which Washington has been
claiming is operated by the Venezuelan heads of state ever since Chávez was
elected in 1998 and is now led by Maduro. Coincidentally, the US Justice
Department waited until this March to introduce an indictment in federal court
in Manhattan the same day the Trump administration put a 15 million-dollar
bounty on Maduro.
Fulton
Armstrong, with decades of experience working for US intelligence, has said
"No serious
analyst I know outside of the government would
say there is a Cartel de los Soles.”
The third claim — that of dictatorial rule — is equally far-fetched
but calls into question Maduro's hard line against adversaries. The decision
to recognize centrist-led parties instead of traditional opposition leaders, for instance, appears heavy-handed. Maduro defenders may respond that those
leaders have cast themselves so far outside of the law by actively supporting
foreign intervention and so many violent, regime-change actions that they have,
at least temporarily, forfeited their democratic rights. But this argument
cannot be applied to leftist parties such as Patria Para Todos (PPT) and the
Tupamaro, which after leaving the governing Polo Patriótico alliance along with
the Communist Party also lost their legal recognition to split-off
organizations. At the same time, the PSUV’s mayor of Caracas made false
accusations regarding the moral conduct of PPT secretary-general José Albornoz.
Government
critics point to irregularities and violation of democratic norms, such as the
Supreme Tribunal of Justice's recognition of certain political parties and not
others. But most critics seldom present concrete plausible evidence of votes
not being counted correctly, surely
essential to defining the government as a
dictatorship. Electoral fraud is frequently conflated with irregularities, as was the case in the two
previous presidential elections of 2013 and 2018. Labeling Maduro a “usurper,”
as the opposition repeatedly does, is predicated on the assumption that
electoral fraud was committed in both elections.
Luis Vicente León,
a much-respected pollster and supporter of the opposition, argued that the
essence of democracy is a state that provides “the
same conditions for all actors, in which the arbitrator
should be impartial ... and public resources not be used in favor of anyone.”
León is right to say that this golden rule is being violated — though to some
extent it always has been, ever since the outset of Venezuelan democracy.
Carlos Ron points
out that at least in one respect the playing field is tilted in favor of the
opposition. "The voter knows full well that by reelecting the PUSV, the
sanctions stay in place. The minute the opposition returns to power they'll be
lifted.” That one factor alone is likely to sway a lot of votes in December.
Steve Ellner, a retired professor at Venezuela's Universidad de Oriente.
is an Associate Manager Editor of Latin American Perspectives and editor
of the forthcoming book Latin American Extractivism: Dependency, Resource
Nationalism and Resistance in Broad Perspective.
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