Chavez and the New South America
by MARK WEISBROT
Hugo Chávez was re-elected president of Venezuela on Sunday, by a margin of 11 percentage points. For most people who have heard or read about Chávez in the international media, this might be puzzling. Almost all of the news we hear about Venezuela is bad: Chávez is cantankerous and picks fights with the United States and sides with “enemies” such as Iran; he is a “dictator” or “strongman” who has squandered the nation’s oil wealth; the economy is plagued by shortages and is usually on the brink of collapse.
Then there is the other side of the story: since the Chávez government got control over the national oil industry, poverty has been cut by half and extreme poverty by 70 percent. College enrollment has more than doubled, millions of people have access to health care for the first time, and the number of people eligible for public pensions has quadrupled.
So it is not surprising that most Venezuelans would re-elect a president who has improved their living standards. That’s what has happened with all of the left governments that now govern most of South America: they have been re-elected. This is despite the fact that they, like Chávez, have most of their countries’ media against them, and their opposition also has most of the wealth and income of their respective countries.
The list includes Rafael Correa, re-elected President of Ecuador by a wide margin in 2009; the enormously popular Lula da Silva of Brazil, re-elected in 2006, and successfully campaigned for his former Chief of Staff, now President Dilma Rousseff, in 2010; Evo Morales, Bolivia’s first indigenous president in a majority indigenous country, re-elected in 2009; José Mujica succeeded his predecessor from the same political alliance in Uruguay – the Frente Amplio — in 2009; Cristina Fernández succeeded her husband, the late Néstor Kirchner, winning the 2011 Argentine presidential election by a solid margin – also with the largest media against her.
All of these left presidents and their political parties won re-election because, like Chávez, they brought significant, and in some cases huge, improvements in living standards. They all originally campaigned against “neoliberalism,” a word used to describe the policies of the prior 20 years, when Latin America experienced its worst long term economic growth failure in more than a century.
Not surprisingly, the other left governments have seen Venezuela as part of a team that has brought more democracy, national sovereignty, and economic and social progress to the region. Yes, democracy, too: even the much-maligned Venezuela is recognized by most scholarly research as more democratic than it was in the pre-Chávez era.
And democracy was at issue when South America stood together against Washington on such issues as the 2009 military coup in Honduras. The differences were so pronounced that they led to the formation of a new hemispheric-wide organization including everyone but the U.S. and Canada, as an alternative to the U.S.-dominated Organization of American States.
Here is Lula last month: “A victory for Chávez (in the upcoming election) is not just a victory for the people of Venezuela but also a victory for all the people of Latin America . . . this victory will strike another blow against imperialism.” The other left presidents have the same views of Chávez.
The Bush administration pursued a strategy of trying to isolate Venezuela from its neighbors, and ended up isolating itself. President Obama promised in the 2009 Summit of the Americas to pursue a different course; but he didn’t, and at the 2012 Summit he was as isolated as his predecessor.
Although the media has been dominated by stories of Venezuela’s impending economic collapse for more than a decade, it hasn’t happened and is not likely to happen. After recovering from a recession that began in 2009, during the world economic crisis, the Venezuelan economy has been growing for two-and-a-half years now and inflation has fallen sharply while growth has accelerated. The country has a sizeable trade surplus. Its public debt is relatively low and so is its debt service burden. It has plenty of room to borrow foreign currency (it has borrowed $36 billion from China, mostly at very low interest rates), and can borrow domestically as well at low or negative real interest rates. So even if oil prices were to crash temporarily (as in 2008-2009), there would be no need for austerity or recession. And hardly anyone is predicting a long-term collapse of oil prices.
The U.S. economic embargo against Cuba has persisted for more than half a century, despite its obvious stupidity and failure. U.S. hostility toward Venezuela is only about 12 years old, but shows no sign of being reconsidered, despite that it is also alienating the rest of the hemisphere.
Venezuela has about 500 billion barrels of oil and is burning them currently at a rate of one billion barrels a year. Chávez or a successor from the same party will likely be governing the country for many years to come. The only question is when – if ever – Washington will accept the results of democratic change in the region.
Mark Weisbrot is an economist and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. He is co-author, with Dean Baker, of Social Security: the Phony Crisis.
This essay originally appeared in IHT.
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One Response to “When Will Washington Accept the New Reality?”
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Washington will never accept Chavez, because Chavez stands for People Over Money, which is anathema to the US Ruling Elites. They believe it should be Money Over People and they do very little to hide it – because their propaganda is all you can hear in the mass media, and the idea that people should get socioeconomic justice in their own country is mocked by a solid 30% of citizens in our country.
Chavez may well be one of the greatest leaders Latin America has seen in many decades. He doesn’t win by such large majorities for no reason: he has POPULAR SUPPORT, despite the fact that most of Venezuelan media is capitalist-dominated and unceasingly castigates Chavez for everything.
Here in the United States, that would be like Ralph Nader finally winning the Presidency despite the continuous hassle he’d get from our MainStream Media. It would show that the American People had wised up and realized that all corporate media lies in favor of corporate interests, and someone who leans toward helping people at the expense of the filthy rich staying filthy rich, will never get an endorsement from them – but the PEOPLE voted for the GOOD MAN THEY WANTED, DESPITE THE LIES.
Clearly, Americans are not ready for Self-Government: they HAVE the vote, they just SQUANDER it in each and every election by voting for one of the two “major parties” (as if we had any “minor parties” in this country that anyone can recall.) If they would en-masse vote for ANYONE OTHER THAN R AND D next time, what fun that would be.
I think the Republicans are FASCISTS and the Democrats are QUISLINGS. Whoever wins, the ruling elites win: the rich and powerful, the members of the Council for Foreign Relations. But I had to quit a correspondent because although they admitted that only a third party could fix anything, they also insisted “but I have to vote Democratic to keep the Republican out.” Odd, but I’ll bet the people on the other side of your fence hear exactly the same in reverse. So when will Americans wake the F up and realize they are taken by the SAME RUBBISH ARGUMENT EVERY ELECTION?
VOTE ANY OTHER PARTY and KEEP voting for an OTHER party – it HARDLY MATTERS WHICH, so long as you do no longer ever vote for R or D. It DOESN’T MATTER if Romney gets in versus Obama; it also DOESN’T MATTER if Obama gets in versus Romney. Either way, YOU LOSE.
VOTE SOCIALIST or GREEN or LABOR, or ANY THIRD PARTY (even, gasp, LIBERTARIAN), UNTIL THE DEMOCRATIC AND REPUBLICAN PARTIES HAVE BOTH BEEN EXTINGUISHED FROM LACK OF INTEREST. (Once your third party is overtaking one of the majors though, do pay attention and stop voting for right wing crap like “Libertarianism”, which is just Laissez-Faire Capitalism-worship under another name. Ron Paul is a FRAUD, if you actually listen to what he says.)
Why vote for THE FASCIST or his QUISLING LACKEY? A vote for either is a vote for THEIR MUTUAL AID SYSTEM to keep the so-called “two party system” in power. Both parties by now DESERVE TO BE EXTINGUISHED FOR FAILING THE PUBLIC. Oh, and for LYING to the public, and RIPPING the public OFF and killing off the public’s children in NEEDLESS AND MEANINGLESS WARS – always a WAR now no matter which party is in office.
LABOR has repeatedly tried to get behind a THIRD PARTY – forever. And someone keeps talking them out of it. I say, warm up the tar and whip out the feathers, boys and girls, and show the “two-party sycophants” what you think of them!
TweedleDEE or TweedleDUM, you’re still being Tweedled.
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So many books one could read. Philip Foner’s 10 volume History of the Labor Movement in the United States, excellent and a real eye-opener; David Harvey’s “A Brief History of Neoliberalism”; Michael Parenti’s “The Face of Imperialism” or his “Democracy for the Few”, 9th edition; to name a few.