Venezuela’s
opposition has played into Nicolás Maduro’s hands/Julia Buxton is professor of comparative politics at Central European University, Budapest.
The
Guardian | 4 de marzo de 2014
Filling
the void left by a charismatic leader is always a challenge, and Venezuela’s
president, Nicolás Maduro, has struggled to command the authority of his
predecessor, the late Hugo Chávez. The burden of succession has proved all the
more onerous as it has fallen to Maduro to address the difficult decisions that
were deferred or bypassed by Chávez, who died a year ago.
Among
the challenges bequeathed to Maduro, who assumed the presidency by a razor-thin
majority in elections last April, two have been pressing: an appalling problem
of crime and corruption that has propelled Venezuela into the top 10 of global
corruption and homicide indices; and a dysfunctional economy.
Crime
and corruption are longstanding, inherited by Chávez from the politicians of
the old regime who sought to remove him in the failed coup of 2002. They were
exacerbated by constant ministerial turnover and the government’s failure to
engage with these issues as social and institutional problems, rather than
facets of capitalism that would fade under Chávez’s model of 21st century
socialism.
High
inflation and shortages are the result of an overbearing state that is intended
to frame the socialist economy. In the early 2000s price and exchange controls
had logic in the context of private-sector lockouts, massive capital flight and
the need to ensure access to high-price goods and services for the poor –
Chávez’s core supporters. But the rationale for their retention has long
expired.
Instead
of addressing the root causes of these problems, Maduro has tinkered at the
edges. This is partly because he doesn’t want to be perceived as betraying
Chávez’s legacy. High oil export prices have helped him, but the opposition
Mesa de la Unidad Democrática – MUD, an alliance led by Henrique Capriles – has
increased the political pressure on Maduro’s government.
At
first Chávez’s successor appeared to have time on his side, facing no
significant challenge to his six-year term aside from the possibility of a
recall referendum permitted by the constitution in 2016. But in recent weeks
students savvy in the use of social media have launched a wave of destabilising
protests. The initial mobilisation focused on the government’s failings on
crime, corruption and the economy, but this quickly morphed into demands for la
salida – the exit – of Maduro. This brought students into alliance with
elements of the hardline opposition of Leopoldo López and Maria Corina Machado,
committed to removing Chávez and now Maduro by any means. Like the student
movement, the anti-regime radicals have benefited from foreign funding, largely
from the US and designated as “democracy assistance”.
López
and Machado were defeated by Capriles in opposition primaries, but they
rejected Capriles’s willingness to enter into dialogue with Maduro on public
safety following the murder in January of Mónica Spear, a former Miss
Venezuela. Fearing that he had lost ground in the grassroots anti-government
movement, Capriles moved behind the protests. This may prove to be his, and not
Maduro’s, undoing: as happened in the 2002 coup, anti-government leaders have
not acknowledged the widespread opposition to violence, disruption and
disorder, and the protests are now petering out.
Particularly
damaging for the protest movement, and accounting for the reluctance of many
journalists to cover events in the country, was the circulation via social
media of fabricated images of alleged brutality by the National Guard –
including claims of sexual violence tweeted by one local actress – subsequently
revealed to be doctored pornography, or abuses carried out by the Egyptian,
Bulgarian and Chilean police. These efforts to internationalise support and inflame
opinion ignored the ordinary Venezuelans who support the democratic process,
and who mostly back Maduro.
Venezuela
faces serious economic and security challenges. These need no exaggeration, and
Maduro recognises that they can only be addressed through a national dialogue.
An initial peace conference convened at the end of February was boycotted by
the radicals and Capriles, but attended by lower-profile opposition figures.
They, rather than Capriles, may prove to be the beneficiaries of the popular frustration
with Maduro, who for now finds his position strengthened.
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