María Corina Machado: What the Mainstream Media Isn’t Saying About Her
Steve Ellner
NACLA: Report on the Americas
For every decision Venezuela’s
opposition has made in recent months, the far-rightist María Corina Machado has
had the last word. Center-right leaders, meanwhile, have ended up capitulating
to her demands. Her success has much to do with the backing she has received
from two faithful allies: Washington and the mainstream media.
With all the hype over María Corina
Machado being the only real hope for Venezuela to overcome 25 years of
autocratic rule, the mainstream media loses sight of several key factors
surrounding the nation's presidential elections slated for July 28. First, the
U.S. has played a central role in favor of Machado's candidacy and, once it was
clear that the government of Nicolas Maduro would not allow her to run,
Washington backed the notion that she had the right to choose who would
represent the so-called united democratic opposition at the polls.
Second, it was never clear on what
basis Machado claimed to have that right, especially in light of the fact that
there were contenders who were as anti-Maduro as her pick and were
infinitely more qualified.
And third, Machado's rise as the
supreme leader of the Venezuelan opposition is part of a world-wide trend in
which far-right leaders and movements have achieved major inroads.
The Venezuelan government has
disqualified Machado from holding public office for a number of reasons. The
initial one was her acceptance in 2014 of a diplomatic position from the
government of Panama enabling her to address the Organization of American
States, where she called for foreign intervention in Venezuela. In June 2023
the National Controller reimposed the ban.
González has participated in only one
of Machado’s 10 large presidential campaign rallies held to date. “Machado dominates the stage,” wrote Resumen Latinoamericano,
adding “she converted herself into the queen of the [rally] platforms” and in
the process has eclipsed all other PUD leaders.
In spite of the opposition's unity, or
at least the appearance of it, two major political currents supporting the
candidacy of González Urrutia are in some ways at cross purposes. For the
center-right (led by the G4 parties Acción Democrática [AD], Un Nuevo Tiempo
and some of the leaders of Primero Justicia), unseating president Nicolás
Maduro is the one and only priority and to do so the unity of the opposition is
essential. In fact, it almost doesn’t matter who the united candidate is
because the opposition's principal message is that the removal of Maduro from office
will put an abrupt end to the country’s economic hardships.
The center-right's strategy for
reaching power differs from that of Machado and the far-right in two aspects.
First by focusing its message on unseating Maduro, as opposed to specific
policies, the center-right hopes to guarantee unity of the opposition by
avoiding divisive positions. And second, a less aggressive discourse would stand
a better chance of convincing the Chavistas to accept unfavorable electoral
results.
Eduardo Fernández, a presidential
candidate in 1988 who aspired to be PUD’s candidate in 2024, called for national
unity and “reconciliation” as a way to guarantee unity of the opposition and to
convince the Chavistas to relinquish power without fear of retribution. Another
presidential runner, Antonio Ecarri, who is outside the PUD’s fold, has pledged
to retain Vladimir Padrino López as Defense Minister. The proposal is designed
to convince the Chavistas that repression against them will not be forthcoming,
much as Violeta Chamorro attempted to do in 1990 when she named the Sandinista Humberto
Ortega to head the Army.
In another sign that he is a stand-in,
González Urrutia stated that his government program is the same as that put forward
by Machado in her bid for the presidency. His candidacy’s program embraces
laissez faire economics with a vengeance. Indeed, its position on privatization
says it all: “The attraction of private capital is the solution and privatization is
the strategy to achieve it.”
The prospect of the privatization of
oil can’t sit well with AD and its offshoot Un Nuevo Tiempo, which take credit
for the industry’s nationalization in 1976 by an AD government. Un Nuevo
Tiempo’s Manuel Rosales, who
Bloomberg stated “tends to be more leftist in his ideology” than Machado, launched his presidential candidacy
supported by the Fuerza Vecinal party, which explicitly opposes oil privatization. Machado supporters criticized another presidential
aspirant, Henrique Capriles, for saying “the oil is
the people’s.”
In spite of differences, Machado has
gotten her way at each instance. For example, Primero Justicia’s Henrique Capriles,
who was also prohibited from running, dropped out of the primaries in order to
avoid giving the government an excuse to keep the PUD completely on the
sidelines. But Machado refused to do the same. Then she insisted on her right
to choose the opposition’s main candidate. The PUD heavily debated the issue
but again ended up giving in to her demand. Some PUD leaders supported Machado
out of fear that she would opt for electoral abstentionism, a possibility that Capriles alluded to during the primaries campaign.
Since Machado chose González Urrutia,
she has given orders to her allies not to refer to the total privatization of
health, education and the state oil company PDVSA. Furthermore, González raises
the possibility of implementing “transitional justice,” which implies leniency
toward leading Chavistas. However Machado is too closely identified with
radical positions on the right to think that the new line is anything more than
a pragmatic campaign tactic. Furthermore, González lacks the political capital
to be able to buck the will of Machado, even if he has the intention to do so.
Carlos Ron, Venezuela’s Deputy
Minister for North America, told me “Machado isn’t fooling
anyone by not talking about mass privatization. Throughout her political
career, this has been her most cherished banner.”
Washington's singular preference for Machado
became particularly evident between January 26, when the Supreme Tribunal of
Justice definitively ruled that she could not run for president, and April 19
when González Urrutia became the opposition’s candidate. During that period, a
journalist asked Francisco Palmieri, head of the U.S. mission for Venezuela
located in Bogotá, if "any opposition candidate would satisfy the Biden
administration." Palmieri went straight to the point: "We have and will continue to support María Corina
Machado as the candidate of the democratic opposition."
In assuming this stance, the U.S. discarded other
options to unseat Maduro. Manuel Rosales, for instance, had much going for him.
In addition to having been elected mayor of Maracaibo and then three times as
governor of the populous state of Zulia, his presidential candidacy was
endorsed by Fuerza Vecinal, a new party with a good electoral track record.
Palmieri justified U.S. support for Machado on grounds that she won the
opposition primaries, but Rosales had not participated in them.
Furthermore, there are 9 candidates who are
running against Maduro in the July 28 elections. The hardline opposition
accuses some of them of “collaborating” with Maduro and calls them “alacranes”
(scorpions). But not all of them, such as in the case of Ecarri, can even
remotely be called collaborators.
The failure of the Biden administration to
maintain a neutral position with regard to the internal divisions of the
opposition raises a number of questions and issues.
First and foremost, given the attractiveness of
other presidential candidates, Washington’s unconditional support for Machado
is not only an intrusion in the internal affairs of Venezuela, but in the internal
affairs of the Venezuelan opposition. Claudio Fermín, who had run for president
on AD’s ticket in 1993 and is one of the 10 presidential candidates for 2024,
said “I have never
seen this degree of external intervention in a Venezuelan electoral campaign,”
adding that it has received “exuberant approval” from some.
Washington’s unswerving support for Machado may
be related to her extreme version of neoliberalism which includes the
privatization of the oil industry.
Machado’s hard line on the Chavistas may also
be to Washington’s liking. During the Trump administration, Machado even called
on Washington to call off efforts to establish a dialogue with Maduro, calling
such an endeavor a “fraud.” Echoing allegations coming from Washington, she
rejected “impunity” for Chavistas who she called “criminals
and mafiosos who have utilized money coming from drug trafficking and the food
of Venezuelans.”
This hardline
runs counter to the thesis put forward by opposition pollster Luis Vicente León
that negotiations between the opposition and the Maduro government are
necessary and even inevitable, regardless of who wins on July 28. León’s
position is especially compelling given that the new presidential term does not
begin until 6 months after the July 28 elections.
Machado's decision to choose a
surrogate and center the campaign on herself appears designed to mock the
government and its decision to ban her from running. Her conflictive and
confrontational approach is more likely to facilitate a radical break with
the Chavista past and facilitate the implementation of the radical brand of
neoliberalismo that she stands for.
The Mainstream Media: Machado’s Other Faithful Ally
The mainstream media has meticulously reported each
one of Machado’s accusations against the Maduro government for violating
democratic norms regarding the electoral process. However the most far-reaching
violation of the principle of democracy is not reported at all, namely the
devastating U.S-imposed sanctions on Venezuela which will influence many Venezuelans
to vote for the opposition as the only way to normalize relations with
Washington.
A case in point is the declarations of
Colombia’s ex-president Ernesto Samper, unreported in the mainstream media, that the sanctions
represent a form of “monetary colonialism” and an intrusion in the internal
affairs of Venezuela and elsewhere.
The mainstream media has served as an echo
chamber for Machado’s claims, even those that some consider to be dubious.
Machado's claim that she enjoys overwhelming
and unconditional domestic and international support buttresses two central arguments
of hers. First, that she had the right to choose the opposition’s candidate. And
second, that this time around, unlike in previous years, electoral abstentionism
was unnecessary. But are her assertions credible? Plain facts place them in
doubt.
The corporate media, for instance, takes for granted the accuracy of the
announced results of the opposition’s primaries last October that gave Machado
92 percent of the vote. Machado had vetoed the participation of the National
Electoral Council (CNE) in the process which Henrique Capriles and other center-right
leaders favored on grounds that it promised greater logistical support
including 5000 voting centers. Instead, the primaries were supervised by the
NGO Súmate which Machado herself had founded and had been a vice president of
and which opened just slightly over half the number of voting centers, some of
them in people’s homes.
In the past, Súmate had been denounced for being funded by the notorious
National Endowment for Democracy (NED). Indeed, the late opposition leader
Teodoro Petkoff had called Súmate authoritarian and
refused to participate in the opposition’s presidential primaries in 2006,
which Súmate was to supervise, on grounds that the organization was not
reliable.
The runner-up candidate for the primaries held
in October 2023, Carlos Prosperi of AD, questioned the accuracy of the official
tally, an accusation reinforced by the fact that Súmate failed to undertake an
audit of the primaries and immediately burned the ballots.
Luis Vicente León also questions her claim of
enjoying 80 percent support of the electorate and adds that the rallies of
Capriles for the 2012 presidential elections were “absolutely and clearly superior to all of Machado’s mobilizations.”
León also argued that there were too many
variables to predict that Machado would win on July 28. León has
forcefully argued that without committing fraud, but through what he calls
“electoral engineering,” Maduro could win the elections. In way of example,
León refers to the possibility of extremely long lines outside voting centers
in middle-class areas that are opposition strongholds.
Machado and the Rise of the International
Far Right
Back in 2012, Machado received less
than 4 percent of the vote in the opposition’s presidential primaries. Her rise
as the “principal leader of the opposition” is a sign of the times and boosts
the efforts to create what has been called an “emerging reactionary international,” or what Steven Forti called in
this Spring’s issue of NACLA “a big global family” of the extreme right.
Most of the salient features of Machado’s
discourse and positions coincide with those of reactionary leaders and movements
that have emerged in twenty-first century Latin America. Machado’s embrace of
laissez faire capitalism including deregulation to “stimulate private initiative” points in the direction of
neoliberalism, “shock-treatment” style. This pattern manifests itself in Milei’s
commitment to "destroy the state from within" and his concomitant shock
treatment policies, as well as the defense by Chile’s far-right leader José
Antonio Kast of
Pinochet’s “economic legacy.”
Machado’s positions on international
relations also dovetail with those of the far-right elsewhere in the region.
Machado makes no secret of being pro-U.S. and hostile to its adversaries
including Russia, China and Iran. Along the same lines, she predicts that “once we achieve what we are going to in Venezuela, this will be
the final sword thrust into regimes like Nicaragua and Cuba.”
One of the salient features of the
far-right is its expression of hate for the left which Machado’s rhetoric
reproduces. Thus she attacks the São Paulo Forum and
implicitly accuses it of assenting to “criminal dynamics that go from obscene and ferocious corruption to
financing drug trafficking…[and] terrorist groups.”
To her credit, though, and in contrast
to the far-right elsewhere, she adheres to moderate positions on social issues
such as gay marriage, which she accepts, and abortion.
Machado is an internationalist. She
not only assumes reactionary positions but has openly supported and forged
relationships with rightists in Europe, Israel and Latin America.
As the far-right does elsewhere,
Machado takes sides in elections in favor of her ideological counterparts in
other countries. Machado hoped for the “definitive defeat of Kirchnerism” in
the 2023 elections in Argentina, at the same time that she called Milei
“super-clear, bold, full of energy.” She maintains ties with the rightist Popular
Party of Spain, but also stresses her special relationship with the far-right
Vox, which according to Jacobin played a ”central role in an emerging reactionary international,” and called
its head Santiago Abascal her “friend.”
The support Machado receives from her
right-wing allies throughout the world is more emphatic and strongly worded
than that from centrists. Thus, for instance, in a video interview with
Machado, the right-wing ex-president of Colombia Iván Duque asserted that the
Venezuelan opposition should be called “the
resistance” and
claimed, as Machado forcefully did at the time, that Chávez really lost the
2004 recall election, even though he was declared victor with 59 percent of the
vote.
Machado, like Milei and Brazil’s
Bolsonaro, embodies features of populism: she is a charismatic, polarizing figure
with a Manichean discourse who lacks the backing of a strong political party.
In many countries, the center-right (the
Partido Popular in Spain and Republican Party leaders in the U.S.) have made
deals with, or have accepted the terms imposed by, the far right. In other
countries traditional centrist parties have been reduced to a shadow of their
former selves and have been displaced by the far right (Colombia, Argentina).
The political polarization behind these
tendencies is exactly what is taking place in Venezuela. There on July 28 voters
will be choosing between a far-right candidate and Nicolás Maduro, situated on
the left side of the political spectrum. Regardless of the electoral outcome,
the center-right leaders of the PUD will not easily recover from the bruises received
from far-rightist María Corina Machado.
Steve Ellner is an Associate Managing Editor of
Latin American Perspectives and a retired professor of the Universidad
de Oriente in Venezuela. His latest books include his edited Latin American
Extractivism: Dependency, Resource Nationalism and Resistance in
Broad Perspective (2021)
and his coedited Latin
American Social Movements and Progressive Governments:
Creative Tensions Between Resistance and Convergence (2022).
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