Stuart Munckton
The Venezuelan regional elections held on October
31 registered another decisive victory for the Bolivarian
revolution, just two-and-a half months after the radical
pro-poor President Hugo Chavez won almost 60% of the vote in
the recall referendum. The result has enabled the Bolivarian
revolution to deepen.
Pro-Chavez forces made significant gains at the expense of
the increasingly discredited and divided opposition.
Twenty-one out of 23 state governors are now pro-Chavez, up
from 15. Even more significant is the Chavistas increase in
control over municipalities from 115 to 270 out of 335.
This represents over 80% of Venezuelas cities and
towns. One of the most significant victories was the Chavista
win in the election for mayor of Caracas. This strategically
important position had been held by the opposition, however,
seeing the writing on the wall, the incumbent pulled out of
the race rather than face an embarrassing defeat.
The victory is a key one for the Bolivarian revolution,
giving the Chavistas much greater hold over both local and
state government institutions. This opens the way for a
significant expansion of the social programs that
re-distribute wealth to the poor via health care, housing,
education and food. For these programs to properly work,
support at a local institutional level is required, and the
opposition has worked to sabotage their implementation.
The victory is also a challenge for the pro-Chavez forces.
Many Venezuelan officials, including pro-Chavez officials, are
widely believed to be bureaucratic, inefficient and corrupt.
Corruption remains a huge problem throughout Venezuela.
In the lead-up to the regional vote, Chavez spoke at a
series of mass demonstrations across the country, emphasising
the importance of using increased institutional control to
deepen the revolutionary process. Chavez declared a war
to the death against corruption, according to an October
22 Venezuela Analysis web site article, and has used the ideas
and example of Argentinean-born revolutionary Ernesto
Che Guevara to explain the sacrifice expected of
officials, speaking of the need for a moral
revolution.
On October 25, Venezuela Analysis reported that Chavez was
calling on all officials to see to it that the 2001 land
reform law, which limits land holdings to no more that 5000
hectares, is fully implemented. He had warned large landowners
(1% of whom control 60% of the land) that the government would
use the armed forces if they did not voluntarily hand their
land over to be re-distributed to the landless rural poor.
According to Jorge Martin, in an opinion piece at the
Hands off Venezuela website on November 1,
Chavezs pre-election speeches at mass demonstrations of
the poor repeatedly called for a break with the capitalist
system. According to Martin, Chavez told the poor:
Within the framework of capitalism it is impossible to
solve the challenges of fighting against poverty, misery,
exploitation and inequality. At a rally in the state of
Bolivar, Martin quoted Chavez declaring We are going to
break [the capitalist system] up once and for all through a
revolutionary process of economic and social liberation.
For its part, the Venezuelan capitalist class has been
forced to accept that its political representatives in the
opposition are too weak to force Chavez from power in the
short term. In a November 10 Miami Herald article
entitled Making Peace with Chavez, Phil Gunson
reported that many business leaders feel there is little
choice but to work with Chavez.
Gunson explained that this was not because the capitalist
class in Venezuela had changed its mind about Chavez since it
tried to overthrow in a military coup in April 2002 and then
tried to dislodge with economic sabotage six months later, but
a pragmatic assessment of the current balance of
power. The article reported that 74% of Venezuelan
business owners expect Chavez to see out the rest of his term,
leaving them little choice but to reconcile themselves to his
government.
From Green Left Weekly, November 17, 2004.
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