Rebuilding the Bolivarian Revolution [View all]
Rebuilding the Bolivarian Revolution
The Rights recent success in Venezuela shows how vital it is to reclaim and democratize Hugo Chávezs project.
by Mike Gonzalez
The December elections to Venezuelas National Assembly completely changed the balance of power within the chamber. Where once Chavistas had an absolute majority, this time 112 of the Assemblys 167 seats were taken by members of a right-wing coalition, the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD).
They were the beneficiaries of an electoral system whose legitimacy their victory demonstrates, despite their repeated claims that Venezuela was a dictatorship.
The victory of the Right was not entirely unpredictable. The Maduro government had been privately discussing the possibility of defeat, though it is unlikely that they anticipated the scale of it. Yet the deeper issue was that President Hugo Chávez, who died in 2013, had won between 53 percent and 63 percent of the vote at every election and referendum from 1999 until his death.
His successor Nicolas Maduro won his presidential contest in 2013 by less than 1 percent over his right-wing rival Capriles Radonski. In just over two years that support, expressed electorally, fell again to around 36 percent.
In other words, many of those who had consistently backed Chávez had either supported MUD or simply not voted, despite knowing that what united the disparate elements of the MUD was their commitment to dismantling the social advances that had been undertaken under Chávez and rolling back the Bolivarian Revolution.
More:
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/03/venezuela-chavez-maduro-mud-elections/