At the start of December, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez conceded defeat [2] in his referendum on constitutional reform—but stated: "This is not a defeat. This is another 'for now.'" The proposed amendments [3] included some populist measures (formal prohibition of torture and incommunicado detention, reduction of the workday to six hours and prohibition of forced overtime, reduction of the voting age to 16, a social security program for "informal" workers) as well as some authoritarian ones (press censorship and suspension of habeas corpus in states of emergency, suspension of the presidency's two-term limit, raising the signatures needed for presidential recall votes)—and some which were both populist and authoritarian (expropriation of private property by presidential decree, executive branch control over the central bank). There may be a paradoxical unity in these two faces of chavismo. As we asked [3] our readers: "Should this be read as a carrot-and-stick tactic: wealth redistribution and social security guarantees to sweeten the pot as an authoritarian state is consolidated? Or are the populist and repressive measures more fundamentally unified: draconian measures will be necessary in order to effect the wealth redistribution—especially given the demonstrated putschist designs [4] on Chávez by Washington and its local proxies?"
Our December issue featured two views on the referendum: a sympathetic one, "Venezuela's Constitutional Reform: What's at Stake [5]," by Sujatha Fernandes of ZNet; and a critical one from the Caracas anarchist journal El Libertario, "Venezuela's Constitutional Reform: A Threat to What Was Won Through Struggle [6]." Our December Exit Poll was: "Is Hugo Chávez a heroic revolutionary socialist or pseudo-left aspiring tyrant?" The original text, sent to e-mail subscribers Dec. 1, when the referendum was pending, read: "Is the Venezuelan constitutional reform a great advance towards socialism or an ominous step towards dictatorship?" We received two responses:
From Tim Slater in Bavaria, Germany:
Neither, but a substantial increase in democracy.
From Kim Alphandary in San Diego:
Anything Chavez does is an advance towards socialism -- he will not live forever, things need to get divided up quickly so that there will be enough time for it to take root.
WW4 Report replies: When Bush messes with habeas corpus, we are the first to protest it. Are such authoritarian measures warranted when in the defense of socialism rather than imperialism? Do we have the courage to make such a blunt argument openly? And in that case, shouldn't we call a spade a spade and just say "advance towards socialism" rather than an "increase in democracy"? Can suspension of habeas corpus ever be an "increase in democracy"? And to make a more Marxist as opposed to liberal argument, can there really be a socialist state which has assumed power and rules through the structures of bourgeois democracy, without a real popular revolution or seizure of the means of production? Might there not be some legitimacy to El Libertario's fears [7] of a "Bolivarian bourgeoisie" which employs populist rhetoric while consolidating new elite control of Venezuela's oil wealth?
Such criticisms have also been raised by indigenous peoples [8] whose lands sit on mineral resources Chávez seeks to exploit.
In the current issue of Peacework [9], co-editor Sam Diener presents a compendium of unsettling press clips on Chávez' authoritarian tendencies, entitled "Militarism in Venezuela: Warning Signs of Dictatorship?" It is worth checking out.
See our last post on Venezuela [10]. See our last Exit Poll results [11].