Venezuela: Dwindling Support for Chávez’s Fake Socialism
Joint Declaration on the
Election Results and the Political Juncture in Venezuela by the League for the
Revolutionary Party (U.S.) and the Internationalist Socialist League (Israel/Occupied
Palestine)
October 16, 2010
Workers’
Revolution is the Answer for Workers and the Poor!
Hugo Chávez
has been in power for over eleven years. The National Assembly elections on
September 26 demonstrated dwindling support for his regime – which points to
difficulties when he comes up for re-election in 2012. Growing dissatisfaction
with the supposedly revolutionary government was exacerbated when the global
economic crisis gripped the country in 2008.
Chávez’s
ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela, the PSUV, won slightly more popular
votes than the opposition. It won a higher proportion of Assembly seats due to
rules that favor the rural areas and less populous states. But Chávez failed to get three-fifths of the seats for the PSUV
– the requirement that would have allowed him to continue to enact measures by
decree.
Much of the left advocated voting for the Chavista
candidates, as usual. The League for the Revolutionary Party (LRP-U.S.) and the
Internationalist Socialist League (ISL-Israel/Occupied Palestine), however,
oppose giving any political support to bourgeois and petty-bourgeois
politicians like Chávez.[1]
We recognize that imperialism dominates oppressed “Third
World” nations and have called for the defense of Chávez
and Venezuela in every clash with imperialism.[2] The LRP called for a
united struggle against both the 2002 coup and the 2002-03 bosses’ lockout in
the oil industry.
At the same time, we
warn that bourgeois nationalists like Chávez will
inevitably betray the struggle against imperialism because their hold on power
presupposes keeping the workers and poor under control and exploited. We
emphasize that the masses’ basic interests are incompatible with the capitalist
system and that they can rely only on their own power to struggle to defend
their interests.
Culminating in their
seizure of state power and overthrow of capitalism, the workers’ struggles
offer the only road to victory over imperialism. Voting for populist bourgeois
candidates like Chávez can only undermine workers’
awareness of their class’s independent interests.
As the LRP noted in
2004: It is clear that the Chávez
government is politically incapable of providing the full defense against
imperialist attack that will be needed. ... Our political opposition to Chávez is based on the fact that he is already a barrier to
the revolutionary unity of the masses. He is a petty-bourgeois nationalist who
wishes to complete a capitalist nation-building project; this brings him into
tactical but not fundamental conflict with imperialism. ... Because he defends
capitalism and private property, he will eventually openly betray the masses or
cripple their struggle decisively.[3]
These recent elections
leave no doubt that Chávez is losing support among
the masses. A review of the class struggle in Venezuela in recent years will
make clear why this is, as well as confirm the LRP and ISL’s perspective that
socialist revolution is the only solution to the masses’ needs. The most urgent
task is the construction of a vanguard revolutionary socialist party leadership
in opposition to Chávez and his PSUV and dedicated to
leading the working class’s struggles to victory over capitalism.
Workers
Battle State Bosses
Today much of the
working class in Venezuela still supports Chávez, but
not as fervently as in the past. Revolutionaries on the ground have
opportunities to address workers who are becoming aware that Chávez is betraying their aspirations. The number of
factory occupations and protests has significantly increased in recent years.
In Sidor,
the biggest steel enterprise, the workers fought for years, demanding
re-nationalization of the privatized industry. The National Guard was viciously
used against the workers on various occasions – as it has been against other workers
under Chávez. Eventually, the government was forced
to comply in April 2008. In 2009 Chávez proceeded to
nationalize other key plants in the same Guayana
region, including iron, aluminum, bauxite and ceramic tile factories. All these
industries belong to a state corporation called CVG (Venezuelan Corporation of Guayana). Next to oil workers, these workers have the most
notable militant history.
Nationalization in
itself has failed to resolve the underlying problems, either in CVG or in
PDVSA, the state oil company. The long list of horrors includes: extensive use
of outsourced workers, deadly industrial accidents, and overt violations of
contracts and labor law. Industries have been mismanaged and run into the
ground. Different groups of workers have been making similar demands for
improvements and have tried a similar range of protests, including limited
strikes. But actions are kept so isolated from each other that there are few
victories.
The struggles of the
grossly exploited and abused subcontracted workers are especially crucial. All
in all, it has become strikingly obvious that conflicts in nationalized
industry are similar to the conflicts between workers and private bosses.
Whether or not those bosses are friendly with Chávez
or with the opposition is not decisive in terms of the basic relationship,
which features increasing attacks on the workforce.
Criminalization
of Protest
Among a militant
minority of workers, resistance has become more aggressive. In turn Chávez has openly advocated many repressive policies.
Actions which closed down streets or involved strikes in so called “strategic”
companies were outlawed.
There are now about 2200 people that have been reportedly
brought up on charges under these kinds of laws. Some have been jailed; many,
like subcontracted workers who engaged in protests against Sidor
years back when it was still private, are free but restricted – they are not
allowed to participate in further protests while awaiting a final decision on
their case, which is continually postponed. Because of this ominous trend, a
campaign was established to stop the “criminalization of protest.”[4]
Escalated
Violence Against Workers
There is also a long history of internal strife within the union
movement; killings over jobs in the construction sector, where different unions
vie for turf, is common. There are also many cases of hired thugs killing union
activists; it is reported that 300 trade union leaders in Venezuela have been
murdered since 2005, and scores more have suffered death threats or attempts,
or serious injuries.[5] The government likes to
attribute such killings to internal battles within a divided union movement,
but that is clearly only a part of the picture. A lot of the guns for hire can
be logically traced to the bosses who benefit from the suppression of class
struggle.
For example, in November 2008, three principal union
leaders of the militant C-CURA union grouping in the state of Aragua were
assassinated after mobilizing solidarity support for a workers’ occupation
against a Colombian transnational. In Aragua at the time, workers had the
highest level of independent struggle, notably at the Sanitarios
Maracay bathroom fixtures factory. In fact one of the murdered union leaders,
Richard Gallardo, had also led the state-wide general strike that took place as
a protest after Sanitarios Macaray
workers were attacked by the National Guard in April 2007.[6] To date there have been
at least eight assassinations of union leaders with the C-CURA tendency just in
Aragua within a few years.
In many cases
assassinations do appear as an overtly political matter, because workers in the
front lines of struggles are getting struck down. Such a case occurred at the
Mitsubishi factory in the state of Anzoátegui in January 2009. State police
charged into the Mitsubishi plant, which workers had occupied in defense of
fellow workers who had been laid off – and they killed two workers. PSUV
governor Tarek William Saab had ordered the police to
dislodge the takeover. While workers’ blood was still fresh on the ground, the
Labor Minister, Maria Cristina Iglesias, a representative of the national
government, demanded that the occupation cease – or she would call in the
National Guard. Other government representatives jumped in to push through a deal.
This was one case where President Chávez’s ultimate
responsibility should be an unavoidable conclusion.
To this day, Mitsubishi workers continue to engage in
heroic protest against maltreatment, and the bosses retaliate with numerous
waves of layoffs and dismissals and other maneuvers – with the government
institutions blatantly favoring the company all along.[7]
It is no surprise that Chávez has never criticized Mitsubishi. PDVSA and the
Venezuelan government were simultaneously involved in a campaign to secure a
deal with the company, backed by the Japanese government, to establish a joint
venture along with Chevron in the oil-rich Orinoco Belt region. Venezuela can not develop this key region without imperialist capital
and technology. But the regime wanted to show prospective foreign investors,
like the Japanese imperialists, that it could enforce labor peace in Venezuela.
The government has never
made any assassination of a unionist into a campaign; in fact Chávez and the government don’t provide coverage of these
matters from the point of view of rousing the public against injustice. The
virtual silence at best sends the message that it is okay to kill trade
unionists that won’t cooperate with the bosses.
Adding to the ominous picture, there is a drastic
level of state intervention into the unions. The PSUV has put parallel unions
into the oil industry and elsewhere in order to vie with the already
established unions and leaders that had been chosen by the workers. The basic
aim is to repress militancy, in order get the mass of workers to do the bidding
of bosses, from accepting substandard contracts to unsafe work conditions.[8]
In May 2010 a new board of directors of CVG, consisting
of “worker presidents” introduced into a number of the basic industries in Guayana, were sworn into their posts by President Chávez with great fanfare — under the proclamation that
this signifies workers’ control of industry! Workers and their union leaders
are now getting into confrontations with these new worker presidents who, like
the parallel unions sponsored by the PSUV, are there to basically favor an austerity
program. Posts in state industry are generally prize appointments reserved by
the government for loyal servants.[9]
Militarization
of Workplaces
Bolivarian Militias were
set up by a modification of the Armed Forces Law in October 2009. Such
“Combatant Bodies” are now allowed to intervene in workplaces. The Bolivarian
Militias are designated as an adjunct to the National Guard, a force that has
been used against workers fighting for their rights in key battles in recent
times.
As a report from the LTS (Workers’ Socialist League)
underscored, “It is really the case that in various enterprises like the state
oil company PDVSA that they had already begun to organize “Combatant Bodies,”
in other words the law had already been put into practice through action. What
really is noteworthy is the repudiation that the constitution of these
“militias” in various state enterprises has generated, as in the recently
nationalized Sidor, where an ample majority of the
workers oppose the organization of these bodies.”[10]
All in all, Chávez has increased repressive actions and maneuvers against
the working class, and at least for now, the offensive has put major battalions
of the class on the back foot – although there is ongoing struggle and much
more on the horizon.
Economy
in Decline
This whole scene can
only be understood against the backdrop of a dependent capitalist economy in
decline, where Chávez has to squeeze the workers even
more than before to make them pay for the crisis and try to maintain good
relations with imperialism. Because of the economic crisis, the opposition had
already started making gains against the PSUV, notably in the regional
elections in November 2008. By then crime rates in Caracas were already
climbing – as well as unemployment, food shortages, lack of garbage collection,
lack of decent housing and the like.
Chávez has
always denied the need for workers’ socialist revolution. Instead, he has
advanced a populist agenda based on the working class participating in an
alliance with pro-Chávez sectors of the capitalist
class in order to advance national goals. His main strategy was always “sowing
the oil,” meaning that oil profits would be invested back into the country to
carry out a more rounded industrial development of the society as a whole and
lift the masses out of poverty. Even with socialist rhetoric used as window
dressing, this bourgeois nationalist strategy based on class collaboration
could not secure much progress.
Previously Chávez enjoyed years of record high popularity along with
record high oil prices. But with the economic crisis, oil prices plummeted in
2008 and stayed low through 2009. The effects of the drop in oil prices
reverberated through the whole economy.
Oil prices rose again in
2010. But it has become obvious that the country can not
just bounce back into recovery: there are so many other shortcomings that just
a higher level of oil income can not resolve. The
nationalized electricity sector is one case in point. Lack of electricity and
water due to a major drought had plagued urban and rural communities – and put
basic state industries on the edge of survival, as forced cutbacks in
industrial production became prevalent due to power shortages from 2008 to the
present.
Important nationalized industries – PDVSA, Sidor and Alcasa (aluminum) –
have suffered major production problems due to these power outages. And
production at Sidor, for example, is still about 30
percent lower than in 2007. Not only are there still power reductions but the
operation is also plagued by lack of reliable funding for basic operational
needs. Massive losses are being projected for 2010. Loans totaling 400 million
dollars have just been procured by Sidor from Gazprom in Russia and the Central Bank of Venezuela just to
be able to pay back some suppliers. But the future is far from clear.[11]
A key factor in the
downward pressure on the economy is the massive amounts of debts incurred,
including as a result of the several waves of nationalizations, where the
regime always generously compensated the owners. A case in point was the 1.95
billion dollars paid to the Argentine-led consortium Ternium
for the re-nationalization of Sidor in 2008, despite
the fact that the private owners left the industrial complex in sad shape,
while owing large amounts of money to workers.
Actual revolutionary
measures such as full nationalization of vital industries and private banks
without compensation, repudiation of past debts and the establishment of a
monopoly of foreign trade could give Venezuela much more ability to control its
own economic development for the first time, as well as ensuring that the
profits reaped from its natural resources and labor go back into developing the
country in the interests of the vast majority of its people. The goal of
national sovereignty can only be carried out by a revolutionary workers’ state
which has a strategy of actively fighting for the spread of workers’ socialist
revolutions internationally. This is the message of Trotsky’s theory of
permanent revolution, which has been actively turned upside down by the bulk of
far leftists operating in Venezuela and their supporters internationally.
Left
Betrayal
One grouping that
Proletarian Revolution magazine has analyzed in the past, the C-CURA union
opposition led by Orlando Chirino, broke with Chávez a few years back and developed a reputation for
alignment with militant workplace struggles, especially but not only in the oil
sector. The union leaders in C-CURA are also by and large affiliated to the Morenoite UIT-CI (Workers Unity International-Fourth
International) centered in Argentina, with the Venezuelan section currently
going by the name of USI (Socialist Left Unity).
In a situation of
profound economic and social crisis, the USI supporters operate in one of the
few countries where large numbers of workers are interested in socialism today.
Overwhelmingly, they confine their role within the bounds of industrial trade
unionism. This is tragic, since they have developed reputations in many cases
as the only leaders that would fight the government on behalf of workers, and
therefore they seem to have the attention of a key layer of politically
advanced industrial workers, even though they are not numerically a big
grouping.
As a purported
revolutionary tendency, their failure to operate openly on the basis of the
proletarian revolutionary interests is signaled by the absence of any notable
campaign for a class fightback going beyond sectoral union militancy. C-CURA has not been known for
raising the need of the unity of the entire working class and poor, employed
and unemployed, union and non-union – and it has subordinated the fight for a
revolutionary workers’ party – which should be the highest priority – to its
platform of union militancy.
In the recent elections,
the C-CURA/USI leaders went to a whole new level of betrayal when they agreed
to run on the ticket of the PPT (Patria Para Todos),
a small bourgeois party which had only recently broken from its long-term
alliance with, and participation in, the Chávez
government. By running on the PPT ticket, they failed to represent even the
most basic idea of independent working class struggle. Giving the USI critical
support in the recent contest was thereby ruled out.
As long as C-CURA leaders
retain key positions in oil and other sectors, advanced workers will have to
demand that they fight to build a resistance to the range of attacks being
suffered by the working class. Demands must be also placed on other union
leaders in Venezuela, such as Marea Socialista, even though they are tied to the PSUV and the Chávez regime. A united front defense of workers and the
poor in Venezuela is a burning necessity, and any steps in that direction
should be vigorously welcomed.
Concrete victories are
possible that can demonstrate the objective power of the working class in
Venezuela, making the class itself more aware of its own power. The workers’
own struggle can go along way to destroying the myth
that Chávez is a friend of the workers and poor.
Workers in Venezuela are
hardly lining up to join the existing opposition with its open ties to U.S.
imperialism. Dwindling enthusiasm for Chávez has not
resulted in growing enthusiasm for the opposition to any large degree. Yet it
is clear that the right opposition will continue to gain ground, if an
authentic revolutionary alternative is not built in time. As internationalists,
we recognize the vital need to support any actions that can advance the cause
of building the revolutionary party in Venezuela. Its importance for the cause
of world revolution, cannot be overstated. Efforts to expose the fakery of Chávez and his centrist supporters of different stripes are
a critical task to aid in this development.
Defend
Venezuela Against Imperialism!
No
Support to any Capitalist Politicians or Parties!
No
Political Support to Chávez and the PSUV!
For Independent Workers’ Struggle!
No to
State Intervention in the Unions!
Stop
Attacks on the Workers and the Poor in Venezuela!
Down with Repressive Laws and the Criminalization of Protest!
Fight
for Jobs for All at a Living Wage!
Down
with Imperialism and Capitalism!
For Workers’
Socialist Revolution and the Re-creation of the Fourth International!
Notes
1. For the
LRP’s programmatic statement, including its opposition to popular frontism and class collaboration, see the Political Resolution of the Communist Organization for
the Fourth International.
The ISL has its origins
in a political struggle in 2007 inside the International Marxist Tendency (IMT)
in which the ISL’s founding comrades opposed the IMT’s notorious uncritical
cheerleading for Chávez, as well as other political
crimes. See “The ISL’s Break with the IMT”
at www.the-isleague.com/the-isls-break-with-imt-english.php.
For the ISL’s recent statement on the elections in Venezuela and the tasks of
revolutionaries, see their “Elections in Venezuela – No Support
for Any of the Parties!” at www.the-isleague.com/venezuela-elections-english.php.
2. See Self-Determination and Military Defense: The Marxist
Method in Proletarian Revolution No. 59 for a discussion of our
general approach.
3. See U.S.: Hands Off Venezuela! in Proletarian
Revolution No. 70.
4. See
“Venezuela: El Libertario warns of possible sentence
to the 14 SIDOR workers,” April 29, 2009, www.indymediascotland.org/node/15444 on the Sidor case. See also www.protestarnoesundelito.blogspot.com for
Spanish language reports on the criminalization of protest in Venezuela,
focusing on the arrests of worker, peasant, and indigenous protesters and
attacks on other social movements.
5. See www.phillyimc.org/en/campaign-against-assassination-workers-venezuela
for English language translations of a number of reports on this issue.
6. See No to Chávez, Yes to Socialism!
in Proletarian Revolution No. 81 for background on this struggle.
7. This
struggle has been headed by the CMR (Revolutionary Marxist Current), a
grouping until recently linked to the International Marxist Tendency. In
general the CMR has continued in its past extreme loyalty to Chávez, and in that way has horribly misled the Mitsubishi
workers. As to the root cause of the murders of their fellow workers, they
provided the following cover-up: “This attack is part of the violent attacks of
the right wing against the revolution. The purpose is ultimately to get rid of
president Chávez and destroy the organizations of the
working class who are fighting for socialism....” See www.handsoffvenezuela.org/new_fascist_assault_on_mitsubishi_workers.htm.
It should be no surprise that they urged Mitsubishi workers and others to vote
for all PSUV candidates in the recent elections.
8. See Kiraz Janicke,
“Venezuela: Oil Minister Fuels Controversy in Union Elections,” July 19th,
2009, www.venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/4637
and Kiraz Janicke,
“Venezuelan Oil Workers Reach Collective Contract,” January 20, 2010, for the
saga of how the PSUV-planted union current, VOS, defeated more militant union
groups and pushed through inferior contracts.
9. See www.correodelcaroni.com for a series of Spanish language
articles detailing the confrontations between aluminum workers at Alcasa, and the “worker president,” Elio
Sayago, a supporter of the “Trotskyist”
Marea Socialista tendency,
known for its proven subservience to Chavez and the PSUV. On October 9,
aluminum workers organized a march to demand that the government resolve Alcasa’s financial crisis and they had begged Sayago to take part. He didn’t show up. On this in
particular see “La situacion de Alcasa
de ganas de llorar” (“The
situation in Alcasa makes one want to cry,” trans.
LRP) at www.correodelcaroni.com/component/option,com_wrapper/Itemid,174/?id=163607
.
10. “Verdaderos cuerpos de control directo sobre el pueblo y los trabajadores,” October 29, 2009 at www.lts.org.ve/spip.php?article256..
Translation by the LRP.
11. See
“Losses at Sidor estimated at USD 815,907,872 ending
this year,” September 10, 2010 at www.eluniversal.com/2010/09/10/en_ing_esp_losses-at-sidor-esti_09A4448053.shtml
and “Sidor negotiates financial support from the BCV
and Gazprom,” June 30, 2010 at www.eluniversal.com/2010/06/30/en_eco_esp_sidor-negotiates-fin_30A4112371.shtml.