People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 21 May 26, 2013 |
Yohannan Chemarapally
OPINION
polls published a
few days before the April 14 presidential elections in
WAKE-UP CALL
FOR RULING PARTY
The
result has come up as
a wake-up call for the ruling United Socialist Party of
Venezuela. Under the
leadership of President Chavez, the party had virtually
swept the board in the
elections for state governors in December 2012. In the
elections held in last
October, Chavez had handily defeated Caprilles by more than
a million votes. A
significant bulk of those votes has thus shifted to
Caprilles within a span of
just six months, and that too to a candidate supported by
the oligarchs. It
should not, however, be forgotten that Chavez also tasted
defeat, narrowly,
when he lost a referendum in 2007 to bring changes to the
presidential term
limits in the constitution.
Opinion
polls taken a few
weeks before the hurriedly arranged presidential elections
had indicated that
the sympathy factor following the death of Chavez would not
translate into
votes. This time, unlike in October last, the opposition was
fully united
behind one candidate. But the opposition had obviously no
realistic hopes of
winning, and it had already started alleging that the
election was anyway going
to be rigged. Caprilles went to the extent of saying that
Maduro would not be
able to complete his term as president, as he lacked the
stature to hold such a
high office. Even before the voting booths opened, the
opposition was already talking
about a “recall” election, in order to destabilise the
Bolivarian revolution.
The Venezuelan constitution has a clause which allows a
referendum to be held
for the recall of the president.
The
opposition in the
normal course of things should have been happy with its
performance but it
chose to dangerously up the ante by alleging fraud and
taking violently to the
streets. As many as 18 primary health centres and three fair
price shops were
targeted, resulting in the deaths of seven people.
Dispensaries working in poor
rural neighbourhoods and manned by Cuban doctors were
attacked. Maduro
described the opposition’s resort to violence as an attempt
to take “
OPPOSITION
UPS THE ANTE
Caprilles
wasted no time
in denouncing the Maduro victory as “illegitimate.” Among
the few international
takers for the claim, not surprisingly however, was the
Obama administration. The
The
Venezuelan Electoral Commission
urged the losing candidate to use “legal methods” to pursue
his complaints. The
commission was quick to audit 54 per cent of votes
immediately after the
complaints from the opposition, in front of observers from
both sides. No
mistakes were found. But yet the opposition shrilly kept on
insisting the
immediate manual recount of all the votes cast in the
elections. In
From
the outset, Maduro had
said that he welcomed a “full recount.” “If they want an
audit, then do an
audit. We have complete trust in our electoral body,” he
said. All the charges
of electoral skulduggery that Caprilles has made have proved
to be
unsubstantiated. All the regional organisations, including
the Organisation of
American States (OAS) and the regional blocs Mercosur and
Unasur, were quick in
recognising the victory of Maduro. The
US GAME OF
DESTABILISATION
Since
the abortive
military coup against Chavez in 2002, the US State
Department has been working
overtime to destabilise the Venezuelan government. An
investigative article
published by the Brazilian Agency for Investigation
Reporting and Journalism — Publica,
has detailed the strategy of the Bush administration to
bring about regime
change in
A
The
opposition, however,
seems to have imbibed the political coaching given from
THE NATION IS STRONG,
THE NATION IS AWOKEN
The
privately owned media
that overwhelmingly supports the opposition kept harping on
Maduro’s working
class background and his beginnings as a bus driver. Maduro
is, however, proud
of his working class roots. He drove a bus to register his
candidacy for the presidency.
Maduro did not help his cause much by pushing ideological
issues to the background
and talking about the importance of spirituality and “the
conversation with a
bird” carrying a message from Commandante Chavez. The
opposition also used a
photograph of Maduro with the late Indian “godman,” Satya
Sai Baba, to paint a
picture of him being a non-Christian in a predominantly
Catholic country.
In
the run-up to the April
elections, the country had experienced another spurt in
inflation following the
devaluation of the currency. Due mainly to the ambitious
welfare programmes the
government had undertaken, which included free healthcare
and education along
with subsidised food for the poor, the central bank was
facing a liquidity
crunch. The government had to curtail some of its food
imports earlier in the
year, leading to shortages of some essential commodities.
All these factors
made the government, which was now under the effective
charge of Maduro,
susceptible to the propaganda unleashed by the opposition.
After the results of
the tightly fought election were announced, the president of
the National
Assembly, Diosdado Cabello, who belongs to the ruling party
and was a close
associate of Chavez, said that the results “oblige us to
make a profound self-criticism.”
He said that it was “contradictory for the poor sectors of
the population to
vote for their long time exploiters.” But the overwhelming
majority of the
Chavistas did not abandon the ship. They no doubt remembered
that Caprilles was
among the enthusiastic supporters of the abortive 2002 CIA
sponsored coup
against Chavez.
In a
televised address
following the elections, President Maduro said that the
American intervention
in the country’s politics, particularly during the months
before the presidential
election, has been “brutal and vulgar --- and in direct
coordination with the oligarchs.”
Though Maduro did not specify the actions undertaken by the
Americans, the
government has been accusing the USAID, the US National
Endowment for Democracy
and the International Republican Institute for strategising
and financing the
opposition’s election campaign. According to the
investigative reporter, Eva
Gollinger, Caprilles was an early beneficiary of funds from
the National
Endowment for Democracy and the International Republican
Institute in 2001 when
he formed his Justice First Party.
President
Maduro has
emphasised that the “peaceful revolution” started by Chavez
would be further
consolidated. “The media myth that our political project
would fall apart without
Chavez was a fundamental misreading of